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                    <text>Interviewee: Barry Goldensohn Years at Skidmore: 1981-2003
Interviewer: Lena Drinkard
Location of Interview: West 55th Street, NY, NY
Date of Interview: 6/16/2015
00:00:00.00 Header
00:00:33:00 Born in Flatbush Brooklyn, in an immigrant community. Attended a diverse and
eclectic James Madison High School with many famous graduates.
00:01:21:00 Barry’s Sister is the famous choreographer Deborah Hay.
00:04:44.24 Went to college at Oberlin University. Met his wife Lorrie Goldensohn and
many close friends.
00:7:52.00 Rob and Peggy Boyers found out that Barry could be hired at Skidmore College
because Hampshire does not have tenure.
00:8:31.20 Barry takes us through a day at Skidmore as a Professor. Taught two literature
classes and one workshop a week and saw students in between and after classes.
Discusses senior thesis informal meetings for a potluck dinner.
00:11:17.00 “A perfect professor of poetry.”
00:15:51.15 Barry discusses the students he stays in touch with.
00:19:03.08 Discusses Skidmore’s approach to education.
00:24:57.13 Barry talks about the writing critiques and workshops he led for students.
00:27:22.15 The writing process.
00:27:26:20 “If there’s one thing I know about my friend Barry Goldensohn, it’s that he
dislikes sweet food, sweet music, sweet literature” - Peg Boyers.
00:29:23.22 Rob Boyers and the liveliness of Salmagundi and other faculty members is
what kept Barry at Skidmore. “Saratoga’s a one horse town and you’re the horse.”
00:32:22.17 Barry on what makes a successful marriage. 00:39:50.28 Barry ended up
teaching three to four classes a semester with students who know him and one another
very well.
00:45:44 “I only retired from teaching not from writing.” The way he taught took a lot of time,
so he needed more time for his life.

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                    <text>Interview with Barry Goldensohn by Lena Drinkard, Skidmore College Retiree Oral
History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, April 1, 2017.
Lena Drinkard: This is Lena Drinkard, interviewing for Skidmore Retiree Memory Project. I am
with Barry Goldensohn in New York City and it is April 1st, 2017. Barry, I’d like to start off my
giving you a chance to introduce yourself and talk about where and when you were born.
Barry Goldensohn: I was born in Brooklyn, in an area that used to be called something like
Flatbush, and now is probably called something else. Went to grade school and high school in an
overheated, immigrant-family community—extended community. Pretty varied, my closest
friends in high school were a mixture of Italian, German, Greek and Jewish. The—My high
school was just a neighborhood high school but its graduates are Ruth Bader Ginsburg, my sister
who’s a very famous choreographer Deborah Hay, and Chuck Schumer, Norm Coleman (used to
be governor of Michigan or Minnesota, something like that), five nobel prize winners—Ruth
Bader Ginsburg did I mention her? And… full of second and first generation immigrant families
where there was a lot of pressure to succeed on the part of the kids.
My family came from, my mother’s family came from Odessa, and my grandfather was
an officer in the (...) army. They left Odessa after the great purge, the great pregome, that drove
all the jews out of Odessa in 1905, after the potential episode. And, it was a family that followed
the pattern of Odesza families. There was one gifted child in the family, that was my mother, so
the family all sacrificed and sacrificed so she could have her ballet lessons. She studied with a
student of Magnitsky who would drive up to the mental hospital that Magnitsky was at at the
Hudson and bring him down to teach classes. Which was spectacularly for my mother because he
really took a shrine to her, regarded her as very special, sent her off to work at an LA company in
New York. Then, she got rheumatic fever, which damaged her heart so she taught ballet for the
rest of her life. But my sister had no choice. Choice of a career. Nor did my daughter. My mother
started on my daughter right away, working on her flexibility. As an infant, Mind you. [Laughs]
But my sister stayed with it my daughter didn’t. I got brought on and put into ballet classes when
I was a kid because it was cheaper than getting a babysitter. It took for my sister but it didn’t take
for me. I left at thirteen. Being dragged to the studio, I had no ability whatsoever. But again, this
was James Madison high school. And then in my junior year I took a national test where the Ford
foundation early admission scholarship and I wound up at Oberlin. I wanted to go to Columbia
but they had no dorm room’s for students for the first couple of years and it would have been
three hours a day commuting from Brooklyn. And Yale had pulled out of it at that point. And I
was forbidden to to go University of Chicago by a father of one of my close friends who
persuaded my parents that the school had been ruined by John Maynard Hutchins. Remember
him? He turned it into a very progressive, wonderful school, but I wound up at Oberlin in the
process of elimination. Met my wife and got married there and met my closest, my oldest
friends.

�LD: Did you start studying poetry at Oberlin?
BG: In High School. And had a very good, wonderful teacher. Very inspiring and sophisticated.
LD: So how did you end up at Skidmore?
BG: I was the Dean of Humanities and Arts at Hampshire College before I was at Skidmore and
decided that I was writing too little and was persuaded by a psychiatrist friend, that if I wanted
more time at writing I should quit my dean’s job which was too engrossing. So I applied to
Skidmore and got a job almost by accident as it turned out. The committee chose me but then it
went up to the dean and the president and they said oh we can’t accept him, he’s a dean and he’s
probably got tenure and we can’t hire people with tenure. Bob Boyers was giving some lectures
at Northwestern University and was sitting on a poetry segment and of all things, the teacher was
teaching a bunch of my poems. So Bob walked into the faculty lounge with that teacher, and said
to him as he entered the room, oh we tried to hire him but we couldn’t because he’s got tenure at
Hampshire. And a voice in the back of the room said, “they don’t have tenure at Hampshire.” So
Bob called up Peggy, asked her to confirm that, and if that was in fact the case, tell the dean and
tell the committee and I wound up getting invited for an interview [Laughs] That’s enough
background.
LD: Can you take me through a day at Skidmore as a Professor?
BG: Well, a day, interesting. Just teaching literally two literature classes and one workshop a
week So, and then seeing students in between and after classes. And I wound up often teaching
three or four classes a semester because I had a bunch of students who wanted to do their senior
thesis in writing poetry, poetry writing. So they met as an informal group but as a class. And
we’d meet in the meaning so there wouldn’t be schedule conflicts with their other classes. Often
over a potluck dinner. Then it would go on sometimes into the wee hours at either my house or
one of their apartments. So it was kind of a senior seminar, right? Every semester I taught a
course I loved which was The Introduction to Poetry. I taught it sort of half as a history of
English poetry class and half as a course of methods and different types of methods, different
historical periods. Starting with Chaucer and winding up with contemporary poets, spending a lot
of time with seventeenth century and nineteenth century. I mixed up along the way. And then I
taught seventeenth century poetry. My first lecture in that class was Shakespeare’s greatest plays.
Al of the work of John Milton was written in the seventeenth century. Some of the greatest poets
in language and we’re not going to look at them at all [Laughs] You’ll have to get them in other
courses and I focused on the lyrical poems of the seventeenth century. And then writing
workshops, and other intro fiction classes.

�LD: When I spoke to Professor Goodwin she described you as the “perfect professor of poetry.”
BG: What could she have meant by that?
LD: I’d like to know what you think!
BG: Well, I was actively involved in making it, and reading it, and teaching it as well. So I
brought together a pretty full background in the literature and of course the poets concerned with
making poems and how poems are made. Looking at the students, how poems are made, how
these particular poems are made.
LD: Can you talk about your relationship with the students?
BG: As my wife puts it describing her students at Vassar, “Oh you fall in love with a few
students every year” and I think that’s pretty true. And I like students and in general, I liked
teaching them. I liked expanding their minds, and expanding their knowledge. And I was trying
to teach them to love what I love, and maybe that’s what Susan was talking about. Also, teaching
writing courses at Skidmore, generally I worked with students for 3-4 years and they got to be
my friends. You know, ordinary lit teachers don’t have that experience, working semester after
semester with the same students. You know you’ll take one course with Professor Boyers maybe
the intro to fiction course and another fiction course but that’s about it. Or a victorian lit course,
you’d take a three courses in the course of four years. Anyway, my students worked with me
semester after semester after semester. Because you could repeat workshops and so, it was the
especially nice part of the kind of teaching I’ve done over the years, that you got to know the
students very well.
LD: Can you think of one student in particular that you had that had an impact on you during
your time at Skidmore?
BG: That had an impact on me yeah. Well, Mark Woodward, who stayed around working at
Salmagundi. Mark did a lot of work with both Bob and me, and has stayed writing and writing.
But in this neighborhood there are a couple of students who, anyone you really know and care
about has an impact on you. And I went to a reading earlier, or last weekend, by one of my
Skidmore students who lives in Austin now but, showed me a draft of her book, she said, it
doesn’t have the dedications in the book so I’ll have to send you a regular copy!. Jardeen Lebair,
is a wonderful writer, only student I remember who won both our jury poetry and fiction prize in
the same year. Remarkably talented student. But there are a lot of students I stay in touch with.

�One of my former students, Laura Marshall lives a few blocks up on the west side. Bruce
Baker, who’s a very very gifted student, star of the hockey team and he’s now coaching… he’s
deeply involved in the city since he’s graduated with minority education, education of the
deprived. So he coaches for different hockey teams ad well as teaching. He started off on the
ground floor for Teach of America. He was the recruiter for Teach of America and then he said,
“Why am I recruiting people to do something that I should do myself?” So he wound up teaching
in the city schools, but one because he was male and because he was white, and because he is
movie-star handsome, he became a very popular teacher. So popular, that he decided to have a
semi-pro hockey career while he was teaching, so they’d keep him on a semester a year while the
other semester he’d be playing hockey. He explained to me how, he lives on this block, so we
see him, and of course in his hockey career he’s broken every bone—small—bone in his body.
He’s also a coach for Columbia's informal hockey team, it’s not a varsity sport.
But I don’t know there’s been a lot of students over the course of the years I’ve come to
love and stayed very close too and it’s a significant part of our social life, my relationship with
former former students, not only from here but from Hampshire and Goddard. Now, Goddard in
the mid-sixties when I got there was a magnet school for the daring and the adventurous student.
That resident undergraduate program no longer exists. But my students there were spectacularly
good. A lot of them are pulitzer prize winners and guggenheim winners and you know major
award winners. One of you I’m sure you know of, the playwright David Mamet, and I’ve had
two students while we’ve been here in New York. Naomi Wallace who was a Hampshire student
and Mammoth.
LD: How would you describe Skidmore at the time that you taught, if you describe Goddard as
the school for the, can you fill in the blank for Skidmore?
BG: Skidmore had a much more traditional approach to education, like the schools I went to, like
Oberlin than Hampshire or Goddard. My Hampshire students—I don’t want to slight them either,
two of my senior thesis students went on to win Macarthur Genius awards. Naomi Wallace was
one of them and Peter Cole who has been teaching one semester at Yale and the other semester
living in Jerusalem and running a press for Israeli and Palestinian poets, crossing a lot of
boundaries. But Goddard was more a traditional education in a way for someone who has
devoted his life to advanced, progressive schools. Like the progressive high school we started
early in the sixties, in the Bay Area with a bunch of quaker friends. That was at the very
beginning of a whole rash of progressive high schools that were starting to emerge and people
would come, we’d often have more visitors than students.
LD: What year was this?

�BG: That was ‘62-’65 and I graduated with the first graduating class I wanted to go back to
college teaching. But my first graduating class of students went to Reed, Stanford, Santa-Cruz.
They were on the board of the student-faculty administration group that was defining Santa-Cruz
which is interesting. And other schools within the california system. Interesting group of
students. That school, after the people that started it passed it on to other faculty members, it got
sort of swept up as a southern most adjunct of the haight-ashbury counter-cultures and it was
destroyed basically by that it became a fairly destructive place and only lasted a few years. But it
was good for the students who went there. One of the student went to Oxford with a grant and
got first in PPE, Politics, Philosophy and Economics, that’s degree you get if you want to be
prime-minister. Almost all of the proceeding prime-ministers and most of the subsequent
prime-ministers had that degree first.
LD: It seems like you really knew and understood each student you had—
BG: Oh, I would never say that [laughs]
LD: Do you think the types of students changed at Skidmore from when you first got there to
when you retired?
BG: I’m not sure. I taught for about twenty-two years. There seemed to be always, a leavening of
very committed and very serious students. I taught fairly esoteric courses. Seventeenth century
poetry, poetry writing, and the Intro to Poetry course, that was the longest draw class of the
largest cross-section of students. But by and large, the students who went on to work with me,
were a largely self-selected group, so I find it hard to generalize about the general run of
students. And I heard one of my students saying to someone else, “Oh I would never dare offer
Shitty work to Professor Goldensohn.” With a self-selected crew that knew I expected a lot from
them, they worked hard. So, I don’t know if that’s the whole student body it’s hard to generalize
but they were always enough of those to keep my classes full.
LD: Is it challenging to grade someone else's creative writing?
BG: Oh, I hardly think of grades. The really challenging part is discussing them. And how you
talk it over in the group, in the workshop and individually. What to say, often the harsh things to
say, that will help them see the problems that they are running into. [Laughs] Another overheard
conversation. I was talking to one of my students in my office and three of my students were
right outside my office, having a raucous so I couldn’t help overhearing, conversation about
“You know what he said to me?” “ You know what he said to me?” You know, like throw this
away or that’s terrible! Or start over again! But if you’re going to teach writing seriously, you
have to be candid about what they’re doing. And it’s hard, you try to be rigorous but teaching

�poetry writing, which is the main thing at Skidmore has these contradictory elements. You want
rigorous attention to what you’re doing, but you don’t want to lose as in any art, the sense of play
in getting there. Because a lot of the most creative work comes with playing with it. Play with it
play with i! I told my students. You have to catch your mind at its most expansive and least
predictable moments. Often this is helped by just lying down. You know, your mind often
releases itself more creatively, at the moment before you fall asleep or at the moment you’re
waking up. Or when you’re just lying down. I remember one of my students saying “Oh he
thinks we do our best work on our backs!” [Laughs]
But it’s being open to the mind at play and not working in predictable grooves. And then
showing it to people that will tell you the truth about what you’re experiencing.
LD: How do you experience criticisms?
BG: Well, Peggy Boyers. Just last week, I showed her a draft of a poem. And she said, “Barry,
it’s too sweet!” [Laughs] And I said Peggy, you’re the person I remember saying,” If there's one
thing I know about my friend Barry Goldensohn, It’s that he dislikes sweet food, sweet music,
sweet literature. I think she’s right. And as a matter of fact, I had written the word “sweet” a
number of times and swept them out. She was right, I was giving into the sentimental side of
myself. It had to do with being eighty and losing a lot of your friends. You know? And that
comes with being eighty. It’s in some ways an apologetic… and how do you keep going when
people are dying? People you love are dying? So I took some sweetness out. It didn’t belong in
that poem.
LD: So it sounds like your identity as a writer… well everyone’s identity as a writer changes
throughout their lives, in what specific experiences they are going through, but when you were at
Skidmore as a professor, how did you divide your time between teaching and writing? And
because you were surrounded by Peggy Boyers, and Rob Boyers and all these faculty members
that were passionate about poetry did that inspire you?
BG: It’s what kept me at Skidmore. It was Bob and the liveliness of the Salmagundi world he
created. I used to tease him by saying, Saratoga’s a one horse town and you’re the horse.
[Laughs] But Salmagundi brought conferences together every year, it brought fascinating people
every year, so I got to know and be friends with Susan Sontag (who I had actually known earlier
from my New York City Days) and George Steiner, and all sorts of fascinating people,
intelligent people. I got an offer for both Lorrie and I to teach at University of Florida, just move
down there from Iowa, (oh I left out that I taught at the Iowa Writers Workshop for a couple of
years) and it enabled Lorrie to get a free PHD because she was a faculty wife.
LD: And at the time you were at Skidmore she was at Vassar.

�BG: Well we lived in Saratoga, and I would drop her off Tuesday morning on this train and pick
her up Thursday night. And she would teach all day Tuesday, all day Wednesday, all day
Thursday. As the president of Hampshire said to me, when she found out, “Oh my god that
sounds like the kind of relationship where your marriage is going to last forever.” Because
there’s just enough space between you. And it happens, we have our sixty-first anniversary
coming up,
LD: What’s the secret to a long—?
BG: Hanging in there.
LD: Can you elaborate?
BG: Becoming one another’s best friend. My wife says, “learning to understand the things that
are difficult about the person you’re with,” which is profounder than “hanging in there.”
LD: And she writes poems as well…
BG: Yes, she’s my first reader always.
LD: What were some of the things you guys did in Saratoga at the time? Because as you said, it’s
a one horse…
BG: Hanging out with Bob and Peg and the other writers. One of my former students from
Goddard, Catherine Davis, I recruited her for teaching poetry at Skidmore and we hung out a lot.
And, she called me up and told me I was offered a job at University of Washington for half the
work and twice the pay, what should I do? And I said, if I ever heard of a no brainer in my life..
LD: Was there anything about Skidmore that you disliked during your time there? Or what was
challenging?
BG: Well, it’s hard to say. I’m not a good hater. Let me tell you one of the things I liked a lot.
The English Department was very congenial, there was not a divided part department. As a Dean
at Hampshire, none of my senior faculty were on speaking terms with one another. That happens
in schools and departments. I was the Dean of Humanities and Arts. I mean that’s ridiculous!.
Lorrie’s Vassar department was which she called a “dysfunctional family.” We saw one of her
colleagues recently and I said, “Oh how is so and so?” and she says, “Urg.. She’s still
teaching…” [Laughs] “I mean this is a woman in her late seventies I’m speaking to, still carrying

�over the animosity from her teaching years, and it deeply divided… that’s never been the case in
my years at Skidmore.
The only experience I had like that was when I was at Iowa. The Writing Workshop was
loosely related to the English Department. And the English Department had a wonderful guy..
was what the rest of the school called “happy valley” because he was just great at human
relationships. He then moved to take over the English Department at Suny Albany, I think his
name was John Gerber, and when i took over the Hampshire job, I brought him down to Albany
and asked him how did you do it? How did you create such a peaceful environment and unified
community? And he said, it wasn’t me, it was the years. It was in the sixties and seventies when
everything was expanding and I never had to get rid of anyone for budgetary reasons and all I
could do was hire people, and set things up. It was the time, but that underlies his genuine
openness to people that made that experience at Iowa so wonderful. What he had to do at Albay
was very difficult which was cut down the undergraduate programs because Albany had no right
offering a doctorate.
LD: What do you think made the English department at Skidmore such a unit at that time?
BG: I don’t know, I asked Bob Boyers at the time if it was always like that and he said during the
Vietnam war, political divides really split up the department but then they got back together or at
least by the time I got there it seemed like a congenial group of people.
LD: And then did you watch, sort of, new faculty members come in throughout the years and it
shifter?
BG: Yeah. One of them, Susannah MIntz, who is chair is getting married so I offered her (.....)
LD: And those sort of soirees you mentioned, where you would sit with students and have a
seminar at houses? Did that happen the entire time because—
BG: Yes, pretty much. After a year, the pattern became that I would have a bunch of students.
Say six- ten independent students wanting to work on poetry as their senior projects and I
realized I would be dead meeting with them every week as a service session and that they had a
lot to learn from one another, so they would sign up for an independent study but we met as a
group. The faculty thought I was crazy for teaching three, four classes. But that was fun. It was
students who knew me well, and one another well, which means they could speak very
cANDIDLY TO one another. I remember students saying once in class about a poem, “that’s the
stupidest poem I’ve ever read in my life!” In a thick New York accent and the student who wrote
it said, “Oh you know… I wrote it on my way to class and I really shouldn’t have offered it.
[Laughs] And You know, students could hear one another say things like that, and they didn’t
have to be mandy-pandy with one another. You try to create in your class a series with a respect

�one another, as people who are trying to learn to do something very difficult, to write a poem.
They had to be able to speak to one another and say I think you should change this. And then
those exchanges would be very illuminating.
LD: I’ve wondered if we’ve sort of lost something over the years because the relationship you
describe with your students, *Lorrie walks in * it feels like there are more boundaries
implemented at Skidmore between the Professor’s and the students and each other. It feels like
there are more unspoken rules about you know, a maybe more professional relationship
established today?
BG: Well, I thought my relationship with my students was very professional ​about​ writing
poetry. Uh, a greater, are you talking about a greater area of things you can’t talk about?
LD: Mhm, yeah.
BG: You know, I’ve thought about that a lot.
[Lorrie talks to Barry]
BG: No one taking a course in seventeenth century who has been sexually traumatized should
take a course in Shakespeare’s tragedies or comedies for that matter, or seventeenth century
poetry which is often playful and its respect for women was less accompanied with attitudes
about male and female roles. Very unusual. One of my favorite eighteenth century poets, was
about one of the great boundary breaking woman who was irreverent and a giant figure in her
age, her name was Aphra Bayne. I would blush now to recite her most famous poem.
You know it’s really hard to say. The pre-selection process that I was talking about I
think would have… and also the atmosphere, the free give and take served as a kind of barrier
for people whose vulnerabilities would now allow them to do that. Because they were open. It
was an open secret, so to speak. Very much self-selected. Just as it is an open secret that terrible
things happen in Hamlet and Othello and Macbeth. You can’t taming of the shrew for the
instance, is a brilliant comic fantasia on sex roles or gender roles. And the women keep their
power. The shrew says you “marry me you marry my tongue.”
LD: Okay, well we’re reaching the end of the interview. I’m wondering if there's anything we
didn’t get to that you’d like to talk about or share. Maybe a story or some piece of information
that you’d like to end with.
BG: No, I’d just like to say I really liked teaching at Skidmore. But I put a lot of work into
dealing with student papers and was eager to retire at sixty-five to have more time of my own for
my own writing. I’ve written three books since then. Lorrie’s written three ever since she’s

�retired. We’re… as much as I like teaching, I only retired from teaching ​not ​from writing.
Because the way I taught took a lot of time, and I wanted more time for myself.
LD: That’s a great place to end .Thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me today. I
really appreciate it!
BG: I enjoyed it!

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                    <text>Interview with Sarah Goodwin by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, April 11, 2024.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber with Sarah Goodwin and Sue Bender and Leslie
Mechem to interview Sarah Goodwin for our project. We're at the, what is it, the Surrey
Inn?
LESLIE MECHEM: No, the communications.
LG: Communications center, excuse me, on the Skidmore campus today. Did I say it was April
11th, 2024? So, to get started, Sarah, can you tell us where you grew up and a little bit
about your early days and then how you got to Skidmore?
SG: Sure. I was an Army brat. So, I was born at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, and lived at Fort\
Huachuca, Arizona, and thenLG: Fort?
SG: Fort Huachuca.
LG: Huachuca.
SG: It's near Tucson.
LG: How do you spell Huachuca?
SG: H-U-A-C-H-U-C-A.
LG: Okay.
SG: Huachuca, where my father actually developed the first drone program for the military.
LG: Oh.
SG: Yeah. His vision, because he came out of reconnaissance in World War II, was to have
drones doing the reconnaissance instead of human beings that were sent off and often
didn't come back. But they cut the program for whatever reason, so he spent another year
at the Pentagon after that. Let me see. After Fort Huachuca, we spent four years in
Germany with the military, which was formative for me because I learned some German
and was exposed to Europe.
LG: And how old were you then?
SG: Four years old to eight years old. Just strangely enough, Germany, we lived in Karlruhe, in

�Heidelberg. Those felt like home to me really, actually, throughout my life. I've had a sort
of pull back to that region. But I also was exposed to France, and my parents had a
passion for France. They spent some time there after the war. So that happened too. All
those seeds got planted.
Eventually, when Dad retired from the Army, we moved to Palo Alto, California, when I
was nine. And that was my mother's hometown, so we moved in with my grandmother
and stayed. I was pretty happy to have Palo Alto as a hometown. Even as a child, I
recognized that it was pretty special, all those sunny days. You know. And it had been
my mother's hometown, so there was a feeling of welcome there for the family that was
very nice. It was quite different from the Army, a feeling of continuity, of a connection to
the past and so on.
When it came time to apply to college, I was drawn to the Northeast for whatever reason.
That's most of the schools I applied to were in the Northeast. I wound up going to
Harvard as an undergrad. And at Harvard, I majored in English, but I did their
comparative literature option so that I could focus on a period instead of the history of
English and American literature. I focused on the 19th century and did English, French
and German. There was a time when I was in college when all I really wanted to do was
become fluent in French and German. It seemed I could not find a way to justify that
rationally, but it was a drive that I had. So I spent as much time in France and in
Germany as I could and wound up doing a PhD in comparative literature at Brown.
Brown was the only East Coast school I applied to. I was still trying to get back to
California, but it was the one that offered me a full ride. And so there it was. I liked the
program at Brown. I found graduate school really hard. I don't know, just the expectation
of work was, as one of my professors pointed out to me, "This is good training for being
an assistant professor somewhere." And I thought, "Ooh, is that the life I want?"
LG: Did you have a combination of classes and teaching?
SG: Yeah. Classes and teaching. Yeah. The first year I had a fellowship. They called it a
university fellowship, so I didn't have to teach actually until year three. I can't remember
what happened in year two. But it was below poverty level living, but everybody I knew
was... You all know what it was like. It was fine. It was very close relationships. I'm still
connected with some graduate school friends. I finished my PhD, and I spent time in both
Germany and France during my work on my dissertation and applied all over the country.
I actually got one offer the year before I got the Skidmore job, but it was a tenure-track
job that had been turned into a one-year position at UC Riverside. And I've thought a lot
during my life about how differently things could have gone if I'd been doing German
and comp lit at UC Riverside instead of English at Skidmore. I mean, you could not get
more dramatically different, I think, than that. But when I went out for the interview, I
saw teaching German in the middle of these orange groves was going to be a slog, and I
just could not see that in the long run actually working out. So for better or worse, I went
back on the job market and got the Skidmore job the next year. My committee was
delirious. They said, "You're going to love it there."

�At that point, I was already a subscriber to Salmagundi. That was all I knew about
Skidmore. I was a reader of Salmagundi. I loved it, and I found it very intellectually
stimulating.
LG: So, did you have an initial interview at MLA [Modern Language Association]or?
SG: The initial interview was at MLA. I remember Susan Kress and I'm pretty sure Terry
Diggory was there too. Don't remember exactly who else. And then they brought me to
campus. And the day after I left the campus interview, it snowed 27 inches. I remember
that because I was thinking, "Well, I'm glad I got out of there and, oh wow, what's this
going to be like if this turns out?" But the interview went really well on both sides. I
loved it here. I could see that this was a place that I would be very fortunate to teach at.
LG: And what year was that?
SG: That was January of '83. Right. And Ralph Ciancio was chair, and he made the offer. He
was, of course, totally charming, as you can imagine. Mimi and he hosted me at their
house. It all felt very welcoming. And at the same time, I will not forget my interview
conversation with Terry Diggory, who I thought, "Okay, he's got all the brain power I
need in a colleague." Just very simpatico, understood exactly what I was trying to do
theoretically and went straight to the heart of the meat of what I was working on. Then I
also remember Tom Lewis because he was so irreverent. That was good.
LG: In what way? You want to talk about that?
SG: Well, he just said to me, "Do you like graduate school?" And I said, "You know, Honestly,
not really." I might as well be honest. I found it kind of grueling, and I won't bore you
with that, but it did not feel like a warm and fuzzy experience at all. It was more sort of
like the survival of the fittest, and I was never sure on any given day whether I was
considered one of the fittest. And so it was just an intensely uncomfortable situation for
all those years.
LG: Did it have anything to do with male/female?
SG: Oh my God, absolutely. I mean it's telling, for example, that I co-edited a Festschrift for our
thesis advisor, Al Cook, who intellectually, a wonderful person, but he just didn't have
time for women students. But I was one of his advisees, and he dutifully read my thesis.
He wrote about five words on each chapter, sort of encouraging me to go ahead and
finish it. I mean, it had virtually no feedback of substance. And yet there I was co-editing
the Festschrift for him and with these other two guys who were his visible favorites, but I
was so used to that. I mean, that was the way things were at Harvard. You were invisible
so much of the time. And by the way, I spent a year in Paris at the Ecole Normale
Supérieure des Jeunes Filles.
LG: Oh.

�SG: Yes. And the jeunes filles were allowed to sit in the back of the room while the normaliens
sat in the front with all of the illustrious professors, and they tutored them. I mean, they
were on informal terms with those professors. Our housing was on the outskirts of town,
[French 00:09:50]. The Rue Dunois, of course, was right in the center near the Sorbonne.
I was just used to it. It was such a norm. So when I got to Skidmore, it was an incredible
pleasure that right away, there was a Susan Kress in my interview who, she was
phenomenal. She was that perfect combination of professional and welcoming and also,
just intellectually just so alive. Phyllis was on leave that semester when I first came, but I
did get to meet her. And I think that was whenLG: Phyllis Roth?
SG: Phyllis Roth, yeah. I think she was pregnant with Ruth and then maybe gave birth then. I'm
not sure. It was right around then because I'm pretty sure when I first met her, she was
very pregnant. That was kind of inspiring too. I thought, "Okay, may be possible." It was
different. I was very different. And the fact of it having been a women's college felt to me
like some kind of mark on its character that was entirely positive for me.
LG: So, when you first came, what courses were you teaching?
SG: Whoa.
LG: If you can remember. It's been awhile.
SG: Well, actually, I'll mention that during my interview, Ralph Ciancio took me out to dinner,
and we were talking about how everybody in the English department teaches English
105, which I guess it was always English 105, Freshman Composition. At some point, I
sort of heaved a sigh. I was just trying to relax a little, and he said, "What are you
thinking about?" And I said, "I'm thinking I'd really love to have this job." And he said,
"But will you really love to teach English composition?" And I said, "Oh, yeah. I can do
that."
And it was true, I was ready. I had taught it at Brown. I knew what it was. I loved to
teach, and I could see this is a place where loving to teach would be viewed favorably
and not with some kind of suspicion that you weren't serious enough. And I felt pretty
serious as a scholar. I was ambitious. I'd already had some publication. I thought, "I can
do this stuff." But I also wanted to teach. So, English 105 every semester, did I get tired
of that? Sure, yeah. All those papers all the time, relentless, just that paper grading mill.
LG: Did it also give you a chance to interact with the students though?
SG: Oh, there's no shortage of interaction with students. I will say one thing. The English majors
were not the same as the students from across the college. And 105 was my chance to
interact with students from all over the college. There were more men in English 105, for
example, than in your typical English classes when I first began. It evolved.

�LG: Because it was a required course of everybody at the time.
SG: Exactly, exactly. And then also, Skidmore at that time was more tuition driven, and so a lot
of the kids came from very privileged backgrounds. And that was truer of English majors,
I think, than of the student body as a whole, I would guess. I don't know that there's any
data about that. So there was a certain pleasure in having more of a chance to work with
kids who were maybe a little scrappier where they're trying to figure out, how can they
turn this education into a leg up somehow when they were done. I remember one English
major sitting in my office, and he was doing kind of B work. And I knew he was smart.
He was a sophomore, and I just said, "John, where you going to go after college?" And he
said, "I don't actually need to worry about that."
LG: Oh, dear.
SG: And I said, "Yes, you do. Of course you do. You need a life." He looked kind of astonished
that I wouldn't take that so seriously.
LG: So, what courses were you teaching after that?
SG: Oh, 105. And I also taught Intro to Poetry, the 200 levels, so I'm going from 100 to 200.
Intro to Poetry. I taught Introduction to Women in Literature. I taughtLG: Had that been taught before?
SG: Oh, yeah. That had been there, I'm not sure how long, not that long. And by the way, it
didn't count towards the major, so that was a change that some of us did bring about. Yes.
That's a story, I don't know, should I just tell that right now?
LG: Mm-hmm.
SG: We had two 200-level courses, Women Characters and Themes, something like Themes. I
don't know, it's been awhile. And neither of them counted towards the major. And so the
curriculum committee, which consisted mostly of womenLG: The English department curriculum committee?
SG: English department curriculum committee brought a proposal to the department to divide
them into Introduction to Women in Literature and then an advanced course in, gosh, it
wasn't Women Characters, which by that time was theoretically dated. It might've been
just more theory, just something more advanced. Sorry, I can't do better than that. And
that the advanced course would count towards the major. And at that time, this was in the
'80s, feminist theory was really taking off. It was very interesting. There were
controversies within it that were toothy, questions of essentialism or sort of pro-women.
Well, I won't get into that.

�But anyway, I'm going to say this. The men in the department did not want that course to
count towards the major, and these were my good friends. And I was just astonished at
the resistance that they put up, including going to the... One of them said, "Well, you
can't have that course count towards the major because so many of the readings are in
translation." And I looked at them and I said, "Well, what about Bob Boyers'
Contemporary Novel course where almost everything was read in translation?" It was
like that somehow was prestigious but feminist theory in translation was not prestigious.
So we kind of beat them down. There obviously were some men who voted with the
women or it wouldn't have passed, but there was that very vocal opposition. And maybe
some of them in the end just couldn't sustain their opposition. Yeah.
LG: Other courses that you taught?
SG: Yeah. Well, see, I'm saving the best for last.
LG: Okay, good.
SG: Because my absolute favorite course that I taught for decades was British Romanticism. I
played with that a lot over the years. I did a lot of different things with it, but I did really
love just teaching the canon of British poetry. And I don't think that course can be taught
that way anymore of British romantic poetry. What I loved about those poets, the late
18th, early 19th century poets, is that I felt that they were of an age that was very similar
to my own. I felt as though 1968 was a definitive year for me where my world got turned
upside down. And I think something like that happened around 1789 to '91 for these
youthful poets. I read them, and I felt as though they gave voice to the same kinds of
anxieties and aspirations and rebelliousness and desires that I lived with.
It was so much fun to teach them because the students did not come in to this course
really expecting to love them as much as they could. And almost always, they left loving
those poets. And I threw in Wuthering Heights because that's such a great romantic novel
even though it's a generation later, or I threw in Frankenstein. That was another one
which is a dream to teach. I loved that course. That was my main 300-level course and
the Feminist Theory course, also at the 300 level. I did teach research seminars on the
Brontes. The department turned out a little top-heavy with Victorianists, though, so that
course sort of slipped away to me, to my regret, because that was a really fun course to
teach.
LG: Now, at some point you got into administration or to administering at least the engineer
department?
SG: Yes.
LG: Want to talk about that?
SG: Yeah. But before I do, can I just add that I also taught in the liberal studies curriculum.

�LG: Oh, good.
SG: My LS-3 course on memory was also one of my very favorite courses, and I thought that
was a brilliant curriculum. What I loved about LS-3 was that it had a theoretical construct
going into it, and you had to teach to that construct, which was the relationship, what was
it? Remind me. Between the arts and philosophy. That was essentially, that was at the
core of LS-3 and how to theorize but also how to express things aesthetically and the
tensions between those two modes of discourse. And to have that put there before the
students as this is what you have to learn about in this course felt to me like a validation
of everything I loved to do but the students sometimes didn't want. They sometimes just
wanted to go with the flow and read for the story, that kind of thing.
The other... Oh gosh, I just lost it. What was the other LS course? Oh yeah, I taught an
LS-2 course. Sorry, what was LS-2? It felt like sociology to me. But I taught a course on
romance that was really fun where we read schlock romances but also Pride and
Prejudice. And often, the students would come in there, one student said to me once, "I
thought I was going to get some tips." But again, it was a joy to teach.
Okay, how did I get into administration? Well, it started being chair of the English
department, which is a slippery slope. Department had 30-plus FTEs at the time. Just
delivering that writing requirement, it was on one department, it was a huge burden. And
I kept trying to find ways to get other departments to assume more of that, and some of
them took and some of them didn't. Because I thought I'd rather have Leslie Mechem
teaching her students in classics to write than somebody I've had to pull in off the street at
the last minute because we over-enrolled the class again. And that sounds terrible, but I
am not kidding, sometimes I had to hire people who were seriously underqualified to
deliver that requirement. Sometimes they turned out to be really good teachers, but you
just don't know. And to be doing that in an unplanned way and then sometimes also what
we were paying people, trying to get people on a per-course basis so we wouldn't... I
mean, it was awful.
But I did navigate all that, and I suppose that gave me some administrative skills. And
English was a complicated department in many ways, so I got some experience, just all of
the hiring, all of the performance reviews, navigating curriculum reform and the
challenges of that. I would say the hardest thing was the reappointment and tenure
decisions when there was controversy. And hiring was often almost as controversial but
not as bitter, typically, sometimes as bitter. So there would be divides within the
department, and you tried to reposition those divides so that they didn't split us down the
middle. I got a lot of practice with administrative work.
Sue Bender was associate dean when I stepped down from department chair. And I don't
know, I think maybe a year or two later you were leaving the position, and Chuck Joseph,
who was then dean of the faculty, called me and asked me if I would be interested. I had
just stopped chairing. I was really not interested, to be honest. But we had our first female
president since the beginning of the college.
LG: Who was?

�SG: Jamienne Studley. And she called me and said, "I'd really like you to do this." I didn't really
know her, but I thought, "She must need it for some reason to have a woman in that
position. She's losing a woman." And I wasn't sure who else was even under
consideration. So I agreed to do it, and I sometimes think how different my time at
Skidmore would have been if I had somehow just said no. It was hard. It was very hard,
and Sue did warn me.
LG: What were your big challenges in that role?
SG: What wasn't a challenge? So, let me say from the get-go that I'm not a very organized
person, and I'm not good at saying no. I take on too much. And those were not qualities
that worked well in that position, so I did have too much on my plate. People were happy
to pile that plate full. It was we were a little shorthanded, and then it gradually became
clear that I could not, in fact, manage everything. But things that I loved, let me start right
there. I loved it that I got to work with the Tang. I justLG: Good. I was going to ask you about that.
SG: The Tang for me was that made everything else worth it. It was transformative for me. I
don't mind saying that it changed my life. I had to be intellectually honest and find out
what about the work with the Tang actually seemed urgent to me. And pretty soon it all
seemed really urgent.
LG: Can you go into some depth about what it was that you were doing?
SG: Okay. So virtually within weeks, a few weeks, the first summer that I started the job, our
then director, whose name, I'm sorry...
Sue Bender: Charlie Stainback.
SG: ... Charlie Stainback, who was marvelous, right? He submitted his resignation. And we were
on a president's cabinet, then staff, retreat when that came in. And we're looking around
the table. At that point, Charlie had been reporting to me. I'd probably met with him once
at that point. And Chuck said, "Well, I guess you'll be leading the search." So, I had to
search for a museum director, which was insane. I mean, I had run many searches, but
this was something about which I knew nothing.
And so I took advice from all sides, and I will say that there were people on the Tang's,
oh gosh, what do they call it? Their advisory board, essentially, who were enormously
helpful. Adam, ooh, he just resigned. He just retired from directing the Whitney Museum,
actually, where he went after doing the Addison Gallery, Andover. Adam Weinberg, he
could not have been more generous in his help and his advice and helped me make it. We
were on such a shoestring that year. We did it, if you can imagine, without a search firm.
LG: What was his connection to Skidmore?

�SG: He was on the advisory board.
LG: Okay.
SG: And I'm not sure, did he have any other connection? Maybe not. It might've been a
networking thing for him.
Sue Bender: I think Charlie brought him in.
SG: Charlie brought him in? Yeah, it was a good advisory board. It was pretty amazing. Between
donors and people in that museum world, they brought in fabulous candidates, not all of
whom were actually interested. But we had to figure out how to court them somehow.
And I remember when it was Ian Berry, who is now the director of the Tang and was then
curator and much younger, but he found John Weber, who was at that time director of
education for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. And I called John Weber and
cold call, and John said, "I've been wondering if you would call." Yes, he'd sort of had his
eye, but someone he knew had applied for the position. And he did not want to apply and
compete with his friend, which I just thought, "Okay, very much in your favor." And so
we sorted that out.
He was going to be in New York, I don't know, a week or two later. And I said, "Well,
why don't you just make a little day trip up?" We courted each other, let's put it that way.
I thought he would be a really good hire. It was not my decision, but he had the right
experience. He had the right eye. I mean, Ian Berry's eye is incomparable, honestly, but
you have to know. Then people on the advisory board said, "Go for it." And the search
committee, of course, was also at that point fully pulled in. So, that was one of my
favorite things to do and then just making sure that it happened, just being the person that
John would bring ideas to, and you just don't say no. You say, "Let's figure it out." That
was so much fun.
LG: All right.
SG: What else? Something I hated?
LG: Why not?
SG: Well, one of the other hats that I wore was overseeing assessment at the college. I found a
way, again, to believe that it was urgent. I found a way to believe in it. That was the only
way I could do something. I couldn't do it if I didn't believe in it, but I certainly didn't
believe in much of the culture of assessment nationally. And so I thought what we really
needed to do as a college was talk about, in terms that really made sense to us, what do
we want our students to be learning and how do we know whether they're learning it?
LG: Was this generated by Middle States?
SG: Yes.

�LG: Okay.
SG: By accreditation. Thank you for asking that. The new standards for accreditation that Middle
States had passed involved being able to define the goals for our students' learning and
measure their success. And the whole idea of measuring learning to me seems to me
wrongheaded, but I come out of the romantic anti-empiricist tradition. But I did think we
ought to be able to tell some pretty good stories about it and they ought to be evidence
based. I mean, I'm fascinated by the status of evidence in every discipline. I always wish
that our faculty could have a multidisciplinary discussion of the degree to which evidence
is actually valid in our disciplines. But I think a lot of people don't want to have that kind
of conversation because it's kind of scary. But okay, don't let me go down that road.
I was sometimes asking people to provide evidence that I myself wasn't sure would be
valid for much, given the numbers and given the weakness of the statistics and stuff like
that. But I also thought, "Regardless of all of that, faculty need to be talking with each
other about what they hope their students are learning because we don't know." We know
that our best students are doing really well, but what about all the rest of them? We had
so much anecdotal evidence of stellar achievement. I mean, not just anecdotal but hard
evidence of stellar achievement from 10% of our students. But I thought there were
others that were actually, and I saw it in my department, that were slipping through the
cracks that were not learning what we thought English majors should be learning. And
they were going out in the world representing the English major at Skidmore College,
and we didn't have any way of identifying them early and working with them and stuff
like that.
But faculty were deeply resistant to those conversations. They saw it, as I said once on a
panel about assessment at the Modern Language Association Convention, I said, "I felt
like a Vichy collaborator." And I said, "I didn't think like one, but I could see people
viewing me that way." And it was hard. It just never stopped being hard. The resentment
that people had, the ways that they would see me coming and turn around and walk away.
It was the hardest thing in my entire Skidmore career. I don't know. But I just have one
more thing to say about it.
The thing that motivated me the most thinking about it was that I got interested in where
learning not to be racist had a home in our curriculum. And I didn't see that it had a home
in the curriculum. There were some courses in sociology, but I didn't see that we were
asking our students to think about racism as something fundamental in American culture
that we needed to be more knowledgeable about collectively, all of us. And the more I
read about that, the more I thought, "This is an urgent problem that is not being talked
about enough." And I started seeing assessment maybe as a way to leverage that. And in
fact, when I ultimately became a campus visitor for some colleges like us for Middle
States and for New England, the New England Association, and if I said to the faculty...
A lot of places, there was faculty resistance to assessment. And if I said, "Well, do you
agree that a liberally educated person should not be a racist, should not harbor racism?"
And people would say, "Yes."

�And I said, "Well, do you know where that is located in your curriculum? And how is it
being taught? Even if it's located in the curriculum, what are they learning, and are they
actually learning it?" That was one of the reasons that I got involved in the IGR program
at Skidmore, the inter-group dialog, Intergroup Relations.
LG: You want to say what the...
SG: Yeah, Intergroup Relations is what IGR stands for. That came after my time as dean, so I
want to finish the time as dean first. But that was sort of the pathway that most engaged
me after my time as dean. Anything else about being a dean?
LG: Well, one of the things that I think would be interesting to note is the increasing diversity of
both faculty, staff and students during your tenure.
SG: Yes. That was definitely something that was talked about regularly in president's staff. It
was something that Chuck Joseph and also the other associate dean, John Brueggemann,
and I were very interested in. Pat Oles, who was dean of students most of the time we
were there, also very interested in. And admissions was quite responsive, so it was really
led by admissions. But that was a slow process, but I think the college was transformed
maybe over, I'm going to say a 20-year period. I think it was transformative, ultimately.
Yeah.
LG: Was it driven because of the need to widen the number of students who were coming to
Skidmore?
SG: No, I think it was driven by a need to keep up with changes that were happening in the
academy. I should mention that when I was in the dean's office, I led our re-accreditation
effort with the Middle States accreditation, the regional accreditation. That was a major
effort. And one of the decisions that we made was to leverage that process to advance
changes that we were trying to make. And so we were trying to introduce a new first-year
curriculum. We were trying to strengthen the sciences and position ourselves better to
qualify for more major grants than we could then qualify for and ultimately, build new
science facilities.
And we were also trying to strengthen the diversity of the college in every way in every
department. So using those topics as part of the accreditation process helped us to
advance the conversations because we were asking people to collect the data on these
topics and bring those to us. And let's talk about them and what's the story that we have to
tell there. I thought that was a very positive way to leverage accreditation to further
change, and that was something I was very proud of. It worked. It worked well.
I do remember one particular moment where all of the working groups were gathered in a
room, and I asked them, I said, "So, what are the connections among these three things,
diversity, the first-year experience, and the sciences?" And they looked at me like, "No
connections." They were very siloed in their own strategies. And it was pretty thrilling

�when Muriel Poston came in as dean of the faculty and just said, "What do you mean
there's no connection between diversity and sciences? You need more students in the
sciences, right? And you're losing students in the sciences, right?" You know what I
mean? It was very, I mean, just such low-hanging fruit to change our ways.
LG: So, what are your fondest memories?
SG: Of Skidmore?
LG: Of your time at Skidmore.
SG: This is not a specific one, though actually, I could tell a specific one. But my happiest
moments were in that classroom with the door closed when something landed with the
students. And there was that slight hush after it landed, and you saw something just
happened. It was like something went through the room. I don't know. Of course, I almost
said, and often, it was a little transgressive, which is why I can't talk about all of them on
a recording. But there would be something fun about it. It would be a way that you could
connect with those students. They were young people. They were looking for their own
way. Part of me was really interested in just the nostalgia of early 19th century literature,
but another part of it was, how are they going to bring the future forward? And I would
sometimes teach to that.
I will say that I also did love teaching in Intergroup Relations. I don't know if we're
almost out of time, but I'd like to take a minute with thatLG: Just go.
SG: ... because that was so interesting. Muriel Poston, as dean of the faculty, hired, well,
sociology hired Kristie Ford as a brand new PhD. And Muriel said to me, "You keep your
eye on her." She came from University of Michigan, where the inter-group dialog
program had been begun and developed over 20 years, really. And she wanted to start a
program here. It was not a short process. I went out to Michigan, and I went through a
training process at the University of Michigan in their program and came back thinking,
"That was very powerful. I wonder how that would work here."
I wound up teaching with Kristie and getting the program launched. And there were
things about it that to me were just quite wonderful, and the main one was the strategies
that IGR, Intergroup Relations, programs have for creating a classroom in which very
hard conversations can happen and giving those conversations time so that they could
develop incrementally. So that you would not, if you're talking about race, which is what
it was all about, it was these were race-based dialogs, and the classes were based in
dialog. And the students, they were composed of half students of color, half white
students.
That binary over the course of the semester would get richly textured because everybody
would see that just being a white person meant pretty much not very much. Because our

�white students, overrepresented in the white students were gay students or LGBTQ,
students with invisible disabilities or sometimes visible ones, Jewish students who were
very interested in racism in part because of their experiences and familiar experiences of
anti-Semitism. And those things would surface, and everything suddenly seemed so much
more textured. And those were, again, very powerful moments. And similarly with the
students of color, I mean, they came from extremely varied backgrounds with very wideranging differences in how much privilege they had and in their familial expectations and
socioeconomics circumstances. So, it would take a semester, and I loved that that would
play out. It was sometimes quite imperfect. Some groups were more productive than
others in reaching that deeper understanding.
LG: Now, these were extracurricular groups?
SG: No, no.
LG: Or they were part ofSG: They were part of the curriculum. And to Skidmore's credit, we were the first college in the
country to offer a minor in IGR. And many other schools are trying to do that now. I
think the current one is Amherst College. It's becoming clear that that process of difficult
dialog is exactly what we are going to need and also that it's not a one-and-done
experience, that it takes time to develop it. For our students in IGR, taking one dialog
course is one thing, but taking multiple courses and then serving as a peer facilitator for a
dialog course was the moment when really, they would just come to shine. The students
who left having done the IGR minor in the years when I was active in the program and
stayed in touch with them, well, and also, Kristie's done research on this, it changed
them. It changed them permanently, and they use those skills in their work. They talk
about that.
LG: Sarah, what have you been doing since you retired? And what year did you retire?
SG: I retired in 2019. My final year before I retired, I had a sabbatical year because I'd postponed
a lot during my time in the dean's office. And I did it on condition that I get a sabbatical
year for my final year. And my project for that year was co-curating a show at the Tang
Museum, which did turn out to be a pretty much full-time position.
LG: Right.
SG: We created a marvelous catalog that incidentally won a national award for small museum
catalog. It was, I don't know, I want to sayLG: Exhibit was?
SG: Oh, sorry. The exhibit was called Like Sugar, and it was a classically interdisciplinary,

�transgressive, unexpected, fresh, wild Tang show. And honestly, not because of me. I
would've curated a much tamer show, but you don't do that with the Tang. So I just sort
of, I buckled up and went along. It was just such an intellectually stimulating experience.
LG: And who at the Tang? Excuse me.
SG: Who at the Tang? I worked very closely with Rachel Seligman, who was then and is still a
curator at the Tang, and then also with a faculty group, Trish Lyell in art, who worked
closely with Rachel on selecting the contemporary art that was a major part of the exhibit.
Nurcan Helicke, who was Atalan-Helicke, I think she... And she was in environmental
studies. But we all crossed over different things, but we were looking in part on the
environmental impacts of sugar. And then Monica Raveret Richter from biology. Each of
us contributed in different ways.
I was very interested in, I'm going to say some of the sociological aspects, so sugar and
its impact on race and racism in the United States. I had spent a number of years visiting
Baton Rouge every February or every spring and had viewed many of the plantations
down there. And had also gone, of all things, to Maui and wound up getting really
interested in the sugar plantations there. And started to see that there were some themes
here and that sugar was one of those invisible things. I'd always thought of cotton and
tobacco as being the great products of enslaved workers in this country's history, but I
saw that sugar had also played an enormous role and continues to play an enormous role
that just needed somehow to be told.
So, I would've had a preachier show probably, but at the same time I think it was perfect
in the way it came out because it was unsettling. It was visually very arresting, and it
wasn't preachy. It allowed for people to draw some of their own conclusions. And one of
the things that was especially moving to me about that show that I didn't anticipate was
the number of people who privately admitted to me their own eating disorders that
revolved around sugar, and that was quite powerful. I thought, "This is just not something
that's talked about that much in public discourse." But sugar is extremely powerful in our
culture and is being exported by Americans now all over the world with terrible effects.
And I thought that was one of the things that came out in the show as well.
On the other hand, another thing that came out was sugar is damn fun. Right? And
somehow the idea that those very wildly different emotions and lessons could coexist and
be true seemed to me absolutely the best of what Skidmore does.
LG: Okay. And since you've retired?
SG: Oh, since that. I don't know, I'm really busy, just insanely busy, and so that part hasn't
changed. I retired into COVID, and I was not insanely busy during COVID. COVID was
this incredible hit pause, nothing happens. I know it sounds crazy, but it was restorative
for me. Despite all of the anxieties around the pandemic, I was glad that I wasn't trying to
teach during that time. I don't know that I could've done it. I think I was exhausted at that
point.

�But then I started up two reading groups on race and racism during COVID, one for
Skidmore retirees and one for members of my college class. I graduated in the class of
1975 at Harvard, and it turned out there were a lot of people who wanted to do this. I
won't describe the history of how that came about. It was completely unexpected to me,
but it is still going on. And it is extremely time-consuming, very challenging. It's a mixed
race group. We meet once a month, but I got roped into another group that meets another
once a month that is slightly broader in topic that's about social justice issues generally.
But as it turns out, Harvard is also the nexus right now of a lot of controversy related to
race and racism and how colleges and campuses are doing diversity, equity and inclusion.
And our group does not all see eye to eye on what's happening on campus at Harvard,
and we just... I have to say, I'm using all of my dialog skills to keep that going, and it has
been a very powerful experience.
I will just add that we've also taken a wide detour since the October 7th Hamas invasion
of Israel to incorporate more discussion of anti-Semitism in the group. And that was
something I had already experienced in the IGR program at Skidmore on a much smaller
scale, so it didn't surprise me. But that hasn't made it any easier to navigate. It's been very
complicated and well worth doing. We had a meeting just last night that I thought,
"Okay, wow, we got through that one." So that's kept me very busy.
I also have four grandchildren, two on the West Coast, two here. I'm going to brag and
say my daughter just got tenure at Mount Holyoke this spring and lives close enough that
I can go visit but, mostly, not just for the day. So, I do shuttle back and forth a bit to
Northampton, and that is a source of incredible delight to me, also a whole new
generation to worry about, yay. But otherwise, I want to say something that's very weird
and to put this out there is a little hard, but I almost never read poetry. And when I do, I
find it hard to do. It's like, it's a part of me that isn't ready to be reawakened. And I read
obsessively the news with dread and with horror, and that's not altogether healthy. And I
sometimes think, "You know, Sarah, it wouldn't be so bad if you allowed yourself some
poetry."
LG: Anything else you want to bring up?
SG: Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I started working out, actually, the year I turned 40. And I
don't know why in my academic preparation nobody ever talked about making sure that
you think about the body, but it is really true. And in retirement, one of the greatest
sources of satisfaction is I can work out in as many ways as I want for as long as I want,
and nobody is saying, "Better go grade those papers."
LG: Thank you, Sarah. This has been a delight.
SG: Thank you.
SUE BENDER: Thanks, Sarah.

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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>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>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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Skidmore College -- Retirees -- Administrators&#13;
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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>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>Interviewee: Kathy Carter
Years at Skidmore: 1986-2010
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: December 3, 2018
00:00:00 Introductions
00:01:12 When Carter first heard about the job at Skidmore
00:01:50. Growing up in Glens Falls, New York
00:02:30 Learning how to work in human resources and working with benefits
00:03:21 Adjusting to the shift from the business world to Skidmore
00:04:55 Introducing Carter’s biggest challenges
00:05:30 When did cost sharing start?
00:06:45 Deciding the healthcare plan for union personnel
00:07:51 How would you decide which healthcare plans to offer?
00:08:20 The Mohawk Hudson consortium and healthcare plans
00:09:00 Stop loss insurance at Skidmore
00:10:00 The three health insurance plans at Skidmore when Carter arrived
00:10:30 Dealing with challenges and conflicts with union employees
00:11:20 The joys of interacting with other employees
00:12:20 Attending faculty meetings
00:14:22 Attending various faculty parties to socialize with other employees
00:15:30 Serving under several different presidents at Skidmore
00:16:50 President David Porter and his personality
00:17:35 Keeping in touch with Helen Porter
00:18:15 Not having many interactions with President Glotzbach
00:19:20 Meeting various faculty during meetings to discuss benefits
00:20:30 Explaining benefits to people who were about to retire
00:21:48 What have you been doing since you retired?
00:23:40 Retiree group excursions
00:23:58 During her time at Skidmore, coaching people on if they were ready to retire or not
00:25:10 Planning her own retirement
00:28:15 The addition of new technology on campus and its impact on her work
00:30:31 The differences between the amount of contacts and resources working in the business
world versus at Skidmore
00:32:00 “I loved my time at Skidmore”
00:32:40 Her changing job title and description over time
00:33:00 Steve Herron’s impact on her career and the college as a whole
00:34:50 Closing remarks

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                    <text>Interview with Kathy Carter by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree
Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, December 3, 2018
LYNNE GELBER: We ready? Okay. This is, what, the third of December already?
2018, and we are here with Kathy Carter, this is Lynne Gelber interviewing
Kathy with the help of Brianna Logan, class of 2000?
BRIANNA LOGAN: '20.
LG: '20. Goodness. So, Kathy, thanks for coming in again. Why don't we start by
having you tell us when you came to Skidmore?
KATHY CARTER: Good morning, I'm happy to be here. I came to Skidmore
April 1986. At that time Joe Palamountain was President. Ed McCluskey
was Director of Human Resources where I worked. Karl Broekhuizen was
the head of the division I worked in. Dave Marcell was Provost and Eric
Weller was Dean of Faculty. It was a great team.
LG: Yeah. How did you hear about the job at Skidmore?
KC: It was interesting. I came out of... I came out of a business environment, a
plant environment, actually, and our...
LG: Where was that?
KC: That was up in Glens Falls, New York. It was Ciba Geigy Inc. It was
Hercules, a Swiss company, before Ciba Geigy bought it. Our health
insurance rep from Blue Cross Blue Shield told me about the opening at
Skidmore and thought it would be a good fit. So I decided to apply for it.
LG: Did you grow up in Glens Falls?
KC: I was born in Troy, New York and spent my first four years in Troy and then

�at four, my father had a transfer. He worked for, at that time it was called
Niagara Mohawk, which turned into National Grid, and got a transfer up
further north. So we then moved to Glens Falls and I literally grew up in
Glens Falls.
LG: Good.
KC: My memories are in Glens Falls.
LG: And that's what's important.
KC: Yes.
LG: How did you learn the skills necessary for the kind of work with human
resources?
KC: I grew up in the environment, workwise, when I was working for Ciba
Geigy. I was transferred into the human resource department and had a
couple of very, very good directors who really taught me the ropes of
being in human resources and working with all the benefits. And I had my
introduction to labor relations there, also. So it was, was a learn- on-thejob concept for me. Very interesting.
LG: And did those concepts translate well when you took the job here?
KC: Yes, absolutely. There were things that struck me funny at the time, not
anymore, of course, when I came here, and it was all the political women's
issues. I think I referred to other women in my department as girls once ("the
girls") and found out quickly that wasn't acceptable anymore. It was in the
land of business, but not here. So it was things like that I really had to learn
differently, and easy enough done if I paid attention. Few slips along the way,
I'm sure, but you picked it up pretty quick. As far as the skills, you know, HR
skills are HR skills no matter where you work. You have to walk the line
where you're doing the best for the employees and doing the best for the

�employer. So those skills I brought with me, and they just grew over time here
since I was here so darnn long.
LG: What were your biggest challenges?
KC: Probably my biggest challenges... My biggest challenges were always trying
to- some of my biggest challenges- were always trying to keep a good
handle on the healthcare costs. Clearly, because that affected the college and
then over time, as the healthcare costs grew, it began to affect the
employees, because we in-putted cost sharing, as 99 other employers did.
99% of employers. So it was always trying to find a good balance for the
employees and the employer. In that, that was probably one of my biggest
challenges here.
LG: When did cost sharing start?
KC: You know, I can't remember exactly. I could guess, but it would be strictly a
guess. It had to be.... I'm guessing the late 90s. I'm guessing the late 90s.
LG: And how did you come up with the percentage?
KC: The college, my department really, hired some consultants that worked in
the area and helped us with how to construct that. And it was salary based,
you know, the lower salary paid the least amount. Those with the highest
salary paid a higher percentage. It was thought to be fair across the board.
LG: So this would pertain to both the union and non-union personnel?
KC: It wasn't the union because the union...The union, anything you do with the
union, because it's a contract, has to be negotiated, so they weren't in the
picture on that at the time nor was the college choosing their healthcare for
them. The union had their own healthcare and we paid the premium for
them- it changed over the years, I understand, after I left, but at that time, we
could negotiate. We could attempt to negotiate the cost, but you didn't want

�to leave them without healthcare so that was a negotiating issue. But as far
as the support staff and the admin and the faculty, they were all under the
original cost sharing because they shared in all the healthcare plans we
offered.
LG: How would you decide what plans to offer?
KC: When I first came to the college, the plans were set. There were three plans,
and as years went by we did make some changes. We went out to bid with
different insurances. At one point we joined a consortium and we were the
only ones that ended up buying into that plan, which...it was a pretty decent
plan.
LG: Which consortium, which plan?
KC: It was through the... I won't get the names right because I've been retired so
long now. But it was a Mohawk something consortium, yes, Mohawk
Hudson Consortium. And it was like our own personal....
LG: So, those were colleges, similar kinds of colleges in the region?
KC: Absolutely, but we were the only ones that bought into the plan, so it
became our own personal plan, you know, which was I didn't think
was a bad thing.
LG: That wasn't a self-insured plan?
KC: That was a self-insured plan. That was probably our first self-insured plan. I
liked them because you had some control over them and you always bought
stop/loss insurance in case somebody's bills went over a certain amount,
stop/loss insurance kicked in. Of course, then, you know, if you had too
many of that, you might've gone out to bid again the next year on the
stop/loss insurance. So there were always things that you were trying to
balance.

�LG: So when Skidmore had its own plan, there were three...
KC: When I first came here, they were Blue Cross Blue Shield, which was what
we thought was that of the 8020 plan, and MVP and CD PHP. Those are the
three plans.
LG: And those were the plans that you self-insured?
KC: None of those were self-insured at the time, the first self-insured was when we
changed the Blue Cross Blue Shield plan to the consortium plan, yes, and
since then we stayed self-insured on the main health insurance.
LG: Interesting.
KC: Health insurance is always interesting and highly regulated, so....
LG: What other challenges did you have?
KC: There were union challenges. Union employees would like things different at
times, but you have to follow the contract. It was only in negotiating a new
contract every three years that either side had an opportunity to negotiate
changes in the contract. So that was always a challenge with wants and
needs, and contracts and making people feel, not happy in their work, but
satisfied in their work because of issues that may or may not arise.
LG: What were the most fun things?
KC: Working with employees. When I first came here, it wasn't as busy as it got
in later years. So I could have some, what I called free time, in my day and I
would just walk the campus and stop in different offices whether they were
administrators' offices or faculty departments' offices, and just chat with
them. Or at one point I offered to come to faculty meetings for departmental
faculty meetings and talk about benefits and to answer questions. So the

�interaction with the employees, whether they were the faculty or the admin
or the support staff was always fun for me. I like people so I was in the right
job at the right time, I guess.
LG: In those interactions what was surprising to you?
KC: I don't think there were any surprises for me. I know I made some very good
friends when I worked at Skidmore and I think I shared with you previously
that I had a lot of friends on the faculty side of the house, also. And when I
went to a faculty meeting, and it wasn't every faculty meeting, but, you
know, my friends would pull me over to sit with them and I later found that,
as a general rule of thumb, anyone from the administration always sat in the
upper right-hand side of the auditorium.
LG: Was this in Filene? Or where was this?
KC: So, I think it was in Gannett. It was in Gannett because that was larger then
and that's usually what held everybody. So that alone was surprising to me,
but you know history's history and tradition is tradition. But my friends
still pulled me over. It was fun, you know, it was fun. Skidmore is a great
place to work.
LG: Did you get teased about it among your colleagues?
KC: No, I don't think they'd ever said anything to me but I'm sure I'm sure they
did some thinking about it. But I I would imagine my people in my area that
I reported to were probably happy that I made friends in the faculty as well
as I did every other area. It's just good, I don't want to say business, but it's
just good practice.
LG: There are certain parties that people socialize at during the year- is that
where you would also make contacts with faculty or staff?
KC: Sure yeah, and especially in the early days I would go to any party- just by

�myself. You know whether it was the social...I remember going to a party
for Phyllis Roth. I can't remember why, but it was in Falstaff’s. And I went
over by myself, but I knew enough people that I was comfortable, but I got
to meet more, you know. Or I'd go to after faculty (meeting) get-togethers,
and you know I always enjoyed chatting with different people there. It
was, I guess, I was very social during those years. It was fun.
LG: (laughing) Are you implying that you're not social now?
KC: Well I don't go to as many parties anymore, but my life is pretty full. I guess I
am social but in different ways.
LG: So you served under several different presidents, didn't you?
KC: I did. When I came it was President Palamountain, and I can't remember the
year he retired, but it was in that first year-of the date he retired, I should
say- but it was in that first year of mine because David Porter came in '87,
July 1987, I believe. So I was here a little over a year -when David Porter
started so I didn't have a lot of time with Joe Palamountain. But, what I
remember of him, I remember him as a very shy man, at least with me he
was, and you know I could stop and chat with anybody. And then when
David Porter came he was so different for me, you know, but I had a longer
exposure to him. I guess he was my favorite, David Porter, if we're picking
favorites.
LG: He was?
KC: Well, he was so outgoing and, you know, he knew everybody's names! And
he would write these little thank you notes to people just out of the blue.
And I can remember when I got one from him, I just got such a kick out of
it. And the puns he would tell publicly in his meetings, you know, some
people would just shake their heads- yes, groan- and some people would just
laugh out loud. But, he was a good, kind person and he seemed to have the
leadership the college needed at the time. At least from my viewpoint. He

�was well-liked and his wife was very nice, and I still have lunch with her to
this day. And you know that David died a few years ago as we all
remember, you know, but Helen is still local and she's a good egg. So I keep
getting together with her. There are other retirees, you know, retirees are
always fun for me. They were the fun group and there was a lot I socialized
with. And there's a few that are still around that I knew well and that I still
see.
LG: So who was president when you retired?
KC: When I retired Phil Glotzbach was president.
LG: And you had similar kinds of interactions with Phil?
KC: I didn't have many interactions with Phil. I think he knew who I was, of
course, but there wasn't as many opportunities, I guess, to interact with him.
After David left, we had our first female president, and she wasn’t here that
long and then I think Phil came after. And I didn't have a lot of interaction
with Jamie Studley, our female president. But I certainly knew her, also.
You know, when anybody new on that level came, I would go over to their
home and sit and go over the benefits with them and their spouse, if they
had one, or partner, and explain it. So I certainly had an opportunity to meet
everybody at first. You know, it was the same with any new employees that
came that were benefit-eligible. I got to know so many people on campus
because I was the one who had to explain the benefits to them so that really
gave me an easy way to meet people.
LG: So would you meet with a group or meet individually?
KC: Sometimes I met individually, but I would have a group meeting and I might
have five or six in it, I might have two, I might have three. If it was one, you
know, it's just done in my office but I can't remember how often I did the
group meetings- maybe it was monthly or every couple weeks, depending
on the hiring, of course. You know, but that was a nice way for me to meet

�people and they got to know me and I think it's always easier when you can
put a face to a name so if you do need help in an area you know who to
reach out to.
LG: So you would be explaining benefits to people as they were coming in?
KC: Yes.
LG: What about people who were about to retire?
KC: Oh, I'm the one that helped all of them and that wasLG: Did you start that program?
KC: You know, I don't know. I just did what I was used to doing when somebody
was going to exit. They needed to understand what benefits they were
going to leave with and how they would work and what paperwork needed
to fill out for to get money, so they can make a nice living, or connect
them with one of the reps from the retirement companies to go over their
retirement plan, even before they were going to retire to make sure they
were on the right path so they could have a good retirement.
LG: When you first came were TIAA-CREF and Vanguard already the providers?
KC: Yes, yes. I think Vanguard was relatively new then, but a lot of our
employees- it was probably half-and-half, you know, half went to TIAA
and half went to Vanguard. So they had a presence on campus for sure.
Both good companies.
LG: So, Kathy, what have you been doing since you retired?
KC: Um, I guess just living life. I've been gone 8 years now. This month- it's 8
years at the end of the month. I have a daughter and her family locally, so
my two grandchildren are local, so my grandson is 13. So he doesn't need a

�sitter anymore, but my granddaughter- I'm the back-up when my daughter
needs help, which I'm happy to do or there's lots of sleepovers with that
sweet little seven-year-old. I have a handful of good friends that I'll go to
lunch with or dinner with or go to the movies with. I can catch up on books,
or, I own my own home, so I have quite a large yard to take care of. I have a
huge flower garden. I've done some traveling but not extensively. You
know, I've been to Canada. I visited Texas. I've been to Maine. I've been to
Chicago. You know...
LG: Do you travel alone or do you travel with a group?
KC: No, I've traveled alone usually and sometimes, sometimes, once in a while
it was with a group. But mostly alone and it's to people I know. So I don't
think my travel has been extensive, but it's been enough for me.
LG: Do you ever go with retiree groups on their excursions?
KC: No, I haven't. I haven't felt the need to, or the time, to tell you the truth. I can
remember always coaching people that come to me and say, you know, I
don't know if I should retire. And I'd always say, you know, you know when
you're ready to retire, and it happened with me, too. I knew when I was
ready to retire. And, you know, I had a full life right from the beginning,
and the employees that retired would come back and say to me, "I don't
know where I found time to work before." Well, I've begun to say that
phrase. I don't have time to keep adding new things in it because my
calendar is pretty booked, so....
LG: Would people be worried about having enough to live on?
KC: I think people should always be worried about that you can, you know, very
easily take care of planning by taking advantage of things Skidmore HR
office offers. They bring in a retirement specialist not affiliated with either
company, who's excellent. They bring in TIAA-CREF, they bring in
Vanguard, so people should always be aware of that.

�LG: What involvement did you have with that, bringing people in?
KC: I brought in, I made arrangements, sort of arrangements, you know, because
these people were already available to you. And other colleges had
recommended Dave Carbone, so I made arrangements to get him in here
and I think he's been a pretty big hit, because he still comes here.
LG: Do you want to explain what he does?
KC: Well, I went to him as an employee because I wanted to see. And he really
goes over your plan. What are your plans, what are you thinking, have you
filled out a budget, so do you know how much money you think you will
need? How do you have your money situated in funds? How much you
should withdraw, what percentage you should withdraw a year to make sure
it lasted as long as you could. So, you know, he really goes over so, so
many things with employees. So they really should take advantage. And of
course, the TIAA-CREF and the Vanguard people are looking at their plan
and asking you what your goals are. And you always have to look at your
history of your family and this might sound morbid, but you know how
long your mother and father survived. How long did your siblings survive
to get an idea and is just an idea of how long you are going to survive. So
do you need retirement funds for 15 years or 30 years? So you know, those
are all legitimate things to start thinking about. I can remember I went to
somebody else after I had gone to Dave and I actually made these charts on
an Excel spreadsheet where I had all my income coming in in my budget
going out and you know the man I saw, it was local and of course he knew
me, and he just laughed and shook his head. And said, "Not many people
bring this, these charts but they look pretty good." So I think I was exposed
to it for so many years, I just went ahead and played with numbers for
myself. But these people will help you do that so...
LG: So what kinds of things were most fun, and what kinds of things did you bring
to the table at Skidmore that hadn't been here before?

�KC: You know I don't know what I brought that wasn't here before because
Skidmore had a pretty good system set up. I don't know if I brought more
people skills or not to be honest with you. I like to think I did, but I don't
know because, you know, you don't know what you don't know, you
know? I think- I'm pretty sure I had to bring a level of assistance to
employees they might not have gotten before because I was so hands-on.
LG: The other day you were talking about technology.
KC: Well, that's true. Technology was interesting because in the early years I
talked about where I would go roaming, really, sometimes for an hour on
campus to pop in and talk to people and it was a good way to connect. But
as the years went on, and technology got better, and these new programs
were brought in. It was wonderful because you got all these reports coming
out the back end which helped you in your job no matter what kind of job
you had, but it also took more time to input all the information and the data
that was needed so you can get the reports out. So I found over the years,
and other people also did as we spoke of it, bound to the office more
because there was, there were more hands-on things you had to do
technology wise. I know one of the big differences working for business and
then coming to the college was in business you could assign people to do a
lot, whether it was to write a letter, type a letter for you (which was called
typing back then) or put some information into the computers for you. But
when you, when I came here, really you were at, you know, even in
business, I had a whole law department I could call on down near the city
for any legal questions I had. So you know your contacts are all there
because they worked with you. But when I came here, you know, you really
did your own letters, and you did your own calls and you had to investigate
all the legal ramifications yourself. As time went on, and different HR
directors came in, you know, there were those contacts set up, but it wasn't
for years, probably until the last HR director came in that I really have a
goodLG: And who was that?

�KC: Barbara Beck- that I really had a good contact. And she was the first one that
brought in the law firm, and they did a lot for the college in other areas, but
for me it was a good contact for labor relations issues. If I couldn't interpret
the contract myself or the law. And they had some good benefit people
connected to them either in Albany or Syracuse. So, you know, it was a lot
of years where you had to scramble and find your own resources on this. So,
you know, the college evolved over time and got better, as you would
expect.
LG: So, are there other things you want to say about your time at Skidmore?
KC: You know, I personally loved working at Skidmore. I loved my job. I loved
helping people. I loved helping Skidmore. It was fun and...

LG: Did your job title change over the years?
KC: I always did the same work and my title changed over the years to reflect
the union part, which, you know, I guess...
LG: So when you came, your title was?
KC: I was the Assistant Director for Benefits and then as the union side of it grew,
when Steve Haran was here as the business manager, he really was the key
contact for the union. And I think I talked about him when I was in before.
He did a lot for the college, and I don't think everybody could see that and I
understand it. But he was fun to learn from because he had a lot of
knowledge on how to negotiate things. Whether it was with the contractor
on getting supplies for a new building or negotiating with the union and I
think I mentioned before that he'd turn the budget into pennies and maybe it
would end up as: "We have 15 pennies and we can spend it on these items.
It's going to be up to both of us to agree on how to spend it." And I could
never ever figure out how he got it down [to] pennies. I gave up trying, but I

�learned a lot from him and then when he retired, the HR director really took
over the role of lead negotiator and it was probably the first, it was it was
probably the first director that could assume those duties. And, you know,
my role over the 25 years I was here just kept growing on the union side. So
eventually I probably had the longest title at the college.
LG: Which was?
KC: It was Assistant Director for Benefits, Administration, and Labor Relations.
And that really reflected you know the two sides of the house I did. After I
left I think they hired somebody to do labor relations. And they, you know,
they split it out. But I must be, I juggled well at the time. LG: Anything else
you want to add?
KC: Not that I can think of other than again I'll say Skidmore is a great place to
work. The employees, the faculty, they were fun people, intense people at
times, sometimes mad people, but always the best. It was a great place to
work.
LG: Well, thank you Kathy, it's been a pleasure.
KC: Thank you, Lynne. Thank you, Brianna.

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                    <text>Interview with Sue Rosenberg by Susan Bender, Skidmore College Retiree Oral
History Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, February 11, 2025.
SUSAN BENDER:
This is Sue Bender interviewing Sue Rosenberg for the Skidmore Retiree Oral History Project.
It's February 11th, 2025, and we are here in the Lucy Scribner Library. Hello, Sue. Glad to have
you with us.
SUE ROSENBERG:
Hello there.
SB:
Sue, I wonder if we could begin with just talking about your childhood, where you grew up, what
your early childhood memories are like.
SR:
I grew up, I was born in Manhattan, Kansas, because my dad worked at Kansas State. My dad
was an academic. He was a playwright and taught drama and English. So, he was at K-State for
10 years or so. We lived for a year in New Orleans because he got a job at Tulane. We spent a
summer in Vermont because he had a job at Burlington. We spent a year in Birmingham,
England because he got a Fulbright scholarship and taught at Birmingham, directed some plays.
So, I kind of grew up the academic brat. I mostly grew up in Pittsburgh, because he was at
Carnegie Mellon for many, many years in the drama department there.
So, I sort of liked academe, I liked school. My mom did a lot of working on and off. They had
met, my folks, had met doing repertory theater in Massachusetts. So, they were just into that a
lot. I did not care for theater, but I did like academics. So, I grew up mostly in Pittsburgh. I went
to Kenyon College, where my dad had been. I asked my dad like, "What college should I apply
to?" He said, "Kenyon's real pretty." Had to pass the Kenyon review. So what about that? So, I
applied to like two colleges. Back in those days, you didn't get pounded with all those magazines
from the colleges.
So, I went to Kenyon. I spent a year abroad in Germany, in Tübingen, an old medieval town. It
was beautiful. I ended up majoring in history, which I really liked in high school, European
history, and I ended up with a double major in German just because I had done so much German.
I thought I wanted to go to grad school and be a professor because I really liked the college life.
Didn't want to do the corporate thing and wear pantyhose, and it just was not me. So, I went for a
year to North Carolina in Chapel Hill, but I hated it. It was at a time, it was in the '80s, when
there was a glut of historians. So, they kind of made it like boot camp, and I was going to have to
spend five years to learn Latin as well as the French and German I knew, and I just thought it
was just not fun. It's just the joy was sucked out of it, so I quit, and then I didn't know what to do.
So, I was a secretary, because I could type. I was a secretary at Carnegie Mellon and other
places, and I just kind of fell into a job editing the computing center newsletter at CMU, and we
won some awards and it was just a fun thing to do, and I thought, "Magazines? I love
magazines." So I ended up working at Carnegie Mellon at the computing center, and then back at
Kenyon, where I hadn't been for 15 years, and I did some publications at Kenyon, and then I

Page 1 of 16

�went to Binghamton, did the same sort of thing, publications at Binghamton. Did not love the
public university union thing. Thought I might, but didn't, so I was looking again for a private
school, and there was Skidmore, which I didn't know much about, but Upstate New York seemed
nice. Yeah. So, I was at Skidmore for what, like 25 years, something like that? Yeah, yeah.
SB:
Do you remember what year, when you came?
SR:
It was '91. I want to say it was late in '91, I think.
SB:
Okay.
SR:
Yep, yep.
SB:
And just maybe talk a little bit about what Skidmore was like when you first got here in '91.
SR:
It was nice, I got to say. I liked all my colleagues. I got interviewed by like a hundred people.
And it was just about to start the big campaign.
SB:
What campaign is that? Under which president? David?
SR:
Porter.
SB:
Okay.
SR:
It was David Porter's last campaign. I forget what it was called. But I liked David Porter. I liked
the folks I worked with. Loved my boss, Bob Kimmerle. So, it was good. And I was hired this
time to do just the magazine, not having to do all kinds of brochures and leaflets and other stuff.
So I liked that. I could really focus on the magazine. And then it was a tabloid. It was...
SB:
The magazine being Scope?
SR:
Scope. Yep. It was called Scope for the longest time, and it was a six-times-a-year tabloid. Also,
really good. The previous person, the previous editor, I think, had been really good, Jackie

Page 2 of 16

�Donnelly. I read it when I applied and I thought, "Ooh, this is a fun little tabloid thing. It's literate
and clever and interesting stories." So I thought, "Yeah, I'd like to take this on."
And then Kent Jones was the VP, because we were under Admissions. The PR office was under
Admissions at that time, and that was Kent Jones. And he somehow got some money from a
bunch of trustees, or some trustees gave him money, whatever, to switch to a magazine. So that
definitely costs more to print, but then went to a quarterly magazine. So, we got a better budget
for photography and hiring freelancers, and we had a really good run. Had a really good run. I
really liked doing the magazine. It was a great, great job. I used to get up in the morning and
think, "Yeah, what am I going to do today? This is great." Not many people get to do that in their
job. I realized how good that was.
SB:
So, what were your priorities for developing Scope then in the time that you were here?
SR:
Well, we wanted to make sure it got read, you know? That's really the main thing. So often it just
goes into the bottom of the birdcage, you know? All those things do. And you know, people read
Class Notes, but you don't know how much they read of the other stuff. So I wanted it to be a
readable magazine that would be on your coffee table, that even if you weren't part of Skidmore,
you might go, "Oh, this is an interesting little portrait of some person with an interesting job," or
whatever. So, we just did a lot of interesting alumni interviews. When we had some money for
budget, we did a lot of photography spreads. We did some that were very fun, maybe an eightpage spread with a big photo on each page and just a little paragraph. We did one about the
people who have their kids at the daycare center with a picture of the mom or dad and the little
kid. Adorable.
We did one about staff. We did one with Larry Britt, the security guy, and the house cleaner, and
somebody else, and somebody else, people you wouldn't know that are there to keep the lights on
and shovel the walks and whatever, and a little portrait of them. We did one of people on the
staff or faculty who had kids at the school at that time. So, you got a little student profile with
their mom or dad (we did Una Bray and her daughter), and those were beautiful. We got nice
photographers. We did one of dogs. The dogs really upset the vice president, who was by then
Michael Casey. He thought that was a terrible idea, but about five years later, he admitted that it
turned out to be a great idea. It was one of the magazines that most alum said, "Oh, I remember
that issue." It was about people who bring their dogs to campus and who were kind of known on
campus for having a dog.
So I think it just really personalized Skidmore without beating people over the head. I fought
very hard year after year after year not to have a donation envelope bound into the center,
because, of course, the fundraisers always want that. But I was able to kind of convince or, I
don't know, somehow I got away with not doing stories on things that weren't stories, but were
ads.
SB:
Right.

Page 3 of 16

�SR:
Because the fundraisers want the magazine to be theirs, and they want it to be a brochure that
says, "Now give to us," and I don't think the magazine works well that way, and all schools and
all magazines do that little struggle, or dance, or whatever. The idea is for me, the magazine
softens up the ground and then you can send the troops in and say, "Give me your damn money,"
but the magazine doesn't have to say that. The magazine has to say, "Remember Skidmore?
Remember how you felt good at Skidmore?" or something vague and effective like that without
saying, "Toss up some money." Yeah, and I think it did that, I think it served that. We did some
surveys, we did a number of reader surveys, and they were always good. People read a lot of
parts of it, not just the Class Notes, and we won some awards from CASE [Council for
Advancement and Support of Education]. So yeah, I think we did pretty well.
SB:
So what were some of the awards?
SR:
Mostly the awards were for writing. They had an award for staff writing, because we had really
great staff. We had Barbara Melville, and then the associate editor was Anne Hockenos, and then
Marianne Snell, and then a couple other people in the department, Andrea Wise, who was the
news person, she wrote occasionally. Peter MacDonald, who was the publications person, he
wrote occasionally. Because they were all good writers.
So we had some good features and good stories written by all those people. As a staff, we were,
very small, it was one full-timer and a half-timer, and then a couple people who were just once or
twice a year they would write. So, for a small school and a small staff, I think we had all good
writers. Yeah, so they liked the writing, they liked the style. I wrote a little editor's essay that was
kind of comedic, and they liked that. And at one point when we actually went to the magazine,
we did get Most Improved from the tabloid. But we did not get a national. I don't think we even
went for national awards, but regional. And we were going up against people in this region
which were like Johns Hopkins and some really good magazines, some big schools and good
magazines, so we felt pretty good about that. Yeah.
SB:
You should.
So by implication, it sounds like your audience, the people that you're writing for, were mainly
alumni.
SR:
Yep.
SB:
Were there folks, were there audiences outside of that that you tried to engage?

Page 4 of 16

�SR:
Not too much. Parents a little bit, because those are the other kind of donors, potential donors.
But no, it was really, it's an alumni magazine. A lot of other colleges subscribed, and we
subscribed to a lot of other colleges' magazines too just out of, I guess, professional interest. But
no, it was mostly alumni. I think the fundraising side kind of felt like we needed to appeal to the
board, the alumni board, the trustee board, but I really felt like we needed to appeal much more
broadly. And appealing to alumni is tough. There are kids brand-new out of school and people
100 years old, and the school has changed so much over the past 100 years that there's people
who remember it as a girl's school and people remember the old campus and not the new
campus. So it was a little hard to appeal to absolutely everybody, but we tried to have something
for everybody in each episode.
SB:
Right.
SR:
Yeah.
SB:
So how would you go about pulling together an episode?
SR:
It was really fun. We knew we had to give a certain number of pages to Class Notes. So it was
kind of like in the newspapers, you'd know how much advertising you have and then how much
space you have left. We'd figure out how many pages we had to give to Class Notes, and we’d
figure out how many pages we had left, and we had certain departments, we had campus news,
and we had a couple of alumni profiles usually each time. So we kind of figured out what was
the campus news we would do, and then we tried to have some really fun feature. It was photos
or whatever.
We often did a feature, which I really enjoyed, of just getting a bunch of alumni who were
experts in some field. We did one on water, we did one on some other environmental, I think we
did one on land use. Just interesting issues. We did one on the Middle East, I think. And we just
get a bunch of alumni all around the country who are academics, or in the government, or doing
some local... We had somebody who was like the sewage overseer for LA. That's a pretty
interesting, pretty interesting job. So we managed to get them maybe on the phone or I just get
them on an email group and we just throw out questions and have kind of a Q&amp;A among five or
six people and have an argument, and then I could edit that all down and make kind of a
discussion group out of it. So I really liked some of those. Sometimes we would make a feature
out of something on campus if it was some really big event or maybe like the 25th anniversary of
going co-ed, something like that. You could interview people from the past and currently.
So we just kind of kicked it around. I had my office mostly for the longest time in Palamountain,
right out in the middle where everybody crossed between classes, and so people would just stop
by and go, "Oh, I have this kid who's doing this really great research." Or I'd stick my head out
and go like, "What's happening lately?" And so I would just get some of the coolest tips for what

Page 5 of 16

�kind of projects were being done or just check in with people about starting a new class and what
that was like.
So I just really felt like I had my finger on the pulse, kind of, what was going on everywhere,
especially academically. It got worse when we moved into other corners and we're out of the
academic world. I don't know how you could do a magazine that way, but I guess they're doing
it. But I felt really, in the midst of things, we had for a while an editorial board kind of that we
would call for each issue, and it included somebody from several departments, somebody from
alumni, somebody from the sciences, somebody from the humanities, and just ask them what the
stories were. So we had plenty. The main problem always was what we couldn't cover. We just
didn't have space to cover all the great stories. It's a nice problem to have.
SB:
You've described in a very lively way several of the stories. Any others jump out at you, stories
that you did that were particularly sort of engaging or successful or even strange?
SR:
Right, right. Well, we've done a few that worried the suits. There was one, we did a little
interview of a woman who was a truck driver, and I remember Kent thinking, "That doesn't say
much for a Skidmore education." But she was great. She'd listen to books on tape in her truck.
She was great. There was nothing wrong with her.
SB:
That's wonderful.
SR:
A couple others. We did one who was a professional wrestler. Also raised some eyebrows. But
again, he understood the performance aspect of it. He wasn't going to do it forever. He was a
young guy. He thought it was a blast. It was all about improv, and he understood that. He was
going to go on to something else. So we tried to find some of those oddball stories. We always
used to joke, and so did, I think, people, editors at other colleges about Skiddies in jail or
something like that, but we never did that. I think we probably had a couple maybe who were in
jail, but we steered away from that. But yeah, we just did local people, people from far away. We
just covered everything we possibly could.
Because for the Class Notes, each class year has sort of a class secretary, and each time before
the magazine, they would send out a little blurb saying, "What's your news? Do you have a new
grandkid? Did you travel?" just to solicit Class Notes, and we would get so many good ideas
from that. Just somebody would say, "Oh, I got a new job," and you're like, "Whoa, that's an
interesting job. Let's go interview that person." So again, way too many to possibly cover. So we
just had to try to choose what we thought were best or which ones were available.
SB:
Yeah.

Page 6 of 16

�SR:
Yep.
SB:
That's wonderful.
What about on-campus stories, stories of campus events that... Do you have any recollections of
some biggies that you covered?
SR:
Yes. Yes, I do. Some were not such good stories. We did one because there was a big... You may
have to edit this. We did one, there was a big issue about sexual assault. I can't remember if it
was one particular case, but at some point it seemed like we needed to do a story, and it was on
every other campus too. So I interviewed a bunch of people and sat in on a hearing thing about
some case, interviewed the security guys and the student affairs people. And I thought I wrote a
really good intro, and it got so squashed. So that's the issue with magazines at colleges, is the
VPs or the president want something covered, they don't really want it covered, because to cover
it is too scary. So yeah, there've been a couple of cases like that where something somewhat
untoward happens, the alumni hear about it, you think, "Okay, we need to make a statement
about the magazine is the organ of the college." So of course it's going to make sort of an official
statement, but even that is too scary. It's too scary for the suits. Yep.
So navigating that is really tough. It's really hard. Yeah, yeah. And in the end, when they see it
on paper, they're like, "No, no, no. You have to completely sanitize this," and then it's nothing
you want to print. It does not serve the institution well to come across as a brochure, because
then you're going to lose your credibility. So that was always the issue, is like, do you want to be
credible and admit anything true, or do you want to just whitewash and no one will ever believe
you again? But I think emotion grabs these people, or we can just see them just clutch up and go,
"Oh my God, I can't say that," or, "The magazine can't say that." And the fact is, yes, it could,
but they can't stand it. They just can't stand it. They're under so much pressure. It's really tough,
it's really tough. So I feel for them, but it was impossible in some cases to do a magazine story
that would work for everybody.
SB:
What about on the other end of the spectrum, a celebratory moment that everybody loved?
SR:
Yes. Right, yeah. We can do that. Yep. Again, you have to be careful with that though. You don't
want to just say, "Skidmore's the greatest thing that ever happened in the world," because it's not,
and everybody knows that. So it's hard to do the celebratory ones. We always did a big
celebration at the end of a campaign or something like that. So unless you have something else of
genuine kind of interest, like when we opened Zankel Music Center, that was a big celebration,
and yet it was so gear-heady and nerdy because of the way they had built it, with the acoustics
and the engineering of it, was actually so interesting for a certain group of people that we got our
nerdiest writer to go cover it. And he had a great time doing it, and he didn't want to do most
stories, but it was all about how the parts of the building were kind of separate so that one

Page 7 of 16

�wouldn't vibrate against the other, and it was amazing, some of the stuff they had done and how
they do the acoustics and how they do the soundboard.
It was really interesting. So he wrote a really cool piece that involved a lot of celebration and
how fabulous the place was, but also, look what's behind it. Really interesting stuff. So it may
not have appealed to a lot of people, but it certainly appealed to some nerds out there and some
of the younger folks who liked the technology. So that, I think, we successfully pulled it off. And
we could say, "This is a great building," and say, "and here's why. We really mean it. Here's the
interesting parts about it."
SB:
Well, in your retirement citation, you were credited for developing a voice for Scope. How
would you describe the voice that you created? Because it sounds like it's a tricky thing to do
that.
SR:
It is a tricky thing, and again, it's something that the suits often are a little afraid of because they
want it to be sort of no voice because they don't want to turn anybody off, and of course, that's
impossible.
So, I guess it was kind of my voice, but I did it by having some of those photographic features
that were kind of fun and a little sort of witty and not just, "Gee, these are the greatest people
ever, and look at these wonderful students, and all the professors are fabulous." It was the
personal side of them and the fact that some of them were a little quirky. They weren't all
absolutely perfect, but they were humans. And I think I did it maybe with the little editorial, the
little kind of editor's note that I did up front. It was sometimes just about me, and it was about
things like going to the biology department, where they have the bird specimens and watching a
kid who was learning to stuff the specimen. You gut the damn thing and stuff it with cotton
wool. Yeah, it's a little disgusting, but really interesting, and that's what everybody does at every
biology department, to have these specimens.
So things like that. A little bit about my take on people like Jonathan Kingdon and... Who was
the other one? Jonathan Miller, who came by for the Creative Genius Program, whatever that
was. It was some great money that brought those kind of genius people to campus.
SB:
I think it was the Luce grant that did that for us.
SR:
Yeah. There were kind of arts and science mixes.
SB:
Exactly.

Page 8 of 16

�SR:
Yeah. So I think we put ourselves into the magazine a little bit. We did one where Paul Arciero
in exercise science was doing a program about withdrawing from nicotine for smokers and one
of our... Or no, it was caffeine, withdrawing from caffeine, and one of our writers, Barbara
Melville, was a big coffeeholic, so she decided to try it and see what it would be like. So she
went into his program, and then she wrote a first-person account of how horrible it was to quit
caffeine suddenly, and how the students measured all your reactions and took blood. And so it
was really interesting, and it sort of showed you this research going on and the students getting
access to the research, but it was from a sort of personal point of view, like you could imagine
yourself being part of that research, and probably 50% of the alumni out there went, "Oh, yeah, I
went off caffeine once and it was horrible." So they could relate to it.
SB:
Yeah. And it sounds to me that, listening to your description, that the voice that you're after is
sort of, "This is Skidmore in all of its variations," and allow people then to connect back to the
college through these various lenses.
SR:
Yeah, right, right. So everything we wrote was not for everybody, but it was hopefully for a good
number of them. And you figure you have like a house party, and there's people in this room
talking about something, and then there's people in this room who are slamming beers, and then
there's people in this room doing something else, and you can go from room to room. So you can
turn the page and go, "I don't want to read about the science research, but here's something about
the arts. I want to read about that." So we felt that in every magazine, we should kind of hit more
or less all those interests at least once.
SB:
Well, given that the range of topics that you've described, it sounds to me that you may have
been in a unique position, even at Skidmore, to really have your finger on the pulse of all of the
things that go on on a campus, on a liberal arts campus.
SR:
I really felt that I did, yeah. I felt that I sort of knew Skidmore as well as almost anybody did.
Yeah. And after 20 years, I had some historical institutional knowledge too. But yeah, I had met
faculty in every department, staff in every department. Yeah, yeah.
SB:
So that leads directly into my next question, which is, you, in that 20-plus year time period, must
have experienced a fair amount of change across campus. How would you describe the changes
in Skidmore in the time that you're here?
SR:
I mean, this is where it gets tough. Right now, I don't think it has changed for the better
necessarily. I think the kids are doing fine. I think academically it's fine. I don't know that there's
any particular issues. There may be. But administratively, I think it got a lot more vice
presidents, it got a lot more corporate, it got a lot more hierarchical, a lot less academic, a lot less

Page 9 of 16

�collegial. And so it got much tougher to feel a part of the group. Part of it is that maybe it just got
bigger, that might be part of it. But I think all of academe has had this, I've heard this from other
editors as well, that just suddenly there's a vice president here and a vice president there and
deputy vice president, and pretty soon you just have this huge amount of administration. They're
like, "What happened to the faculty and the students?" And they kind of get a little bit lost by
comparison.
So I didn't care for that, because I grew up also in academe in the day, in my dad's day, when it
wasn't about the administration. Faculty really did have some control, and faculty governance
really was what it was about. So I missed that. And my job particularly just got really hard, it just
got really impossible, which is partly why I was so ready to go. I might've stayed longer if things
had not gone the way they did, but it was just a matter of bosses changing. As everyone says, the
boss is what makes your job. It makes or breaks your job. So yeah, if you don't get along with
your boss, you're done.
SB:
Yeah. So those early years, starting in the Porter presidency, how would you describe those then?
SR:
Those were great. I loved my job. I absolutely loved my job. I loved my job more than any other
job I'd had. I liked Saratoga. So I liked everything about my job. The collegiality in my office
was fabulous. I think we were like the model office for a long time, because we really respected
each other, we all contributed to each other's jobs, but we never stepped on anybody's toes. So
Mary Parliman, the designer, would say, "Can you step over here? And what do you think of
that?" And I could say what I think of it, I'm not a designer, and then it was her decision. If I
hated it, I could say I hated it and she could still go ahead with it because she was the designer.
Or I could call somebody else in and say, "What about this word or this phrase?" and they'd go,
"Oh, I'd do something else," and I could say, "Thank you, but no. I'm going to do what I want to
do because it's my job."
And everybody respected that. Bob Kimmerle was just the best of bosses. He would argue
sometimes like, "Do you want to do this story or do you want to write this this way?" and we
would just have an argument about it, and whoever won the argument won. I was always
thinking I would accede to my boss if I possibly could, but if he didn't make the case for it, then I
didn't accede to him, and he'd be like, "Okay, you're the editor. I hired you to do this." So we
would have a really collegial argument. I really appreciated that. It was just very professional
and also personally warm.
At one point, I had been talking to folks about getting a dog. I'd had cats before and I wanted a
dog now. I had bought a house, so I was going to have a dog. And one of my colleagues, Barbara
Melville, went with me to pick up the puppy. And so everybody had kind of heard a little bit
about me having this dog. And a secretary came down and said, "Oh, Bob needs to see you in his
office." So I run upstairs to Bob's office, and there's a puppy shower that they have thrown for
me. It was so cute, with little puppy toys and puppy accessories. It was crazy. I had no idea they
were going to do something like that.

Page 10 of 16

�So this was just, we used to go out together to student theater or student concerts or something.
We'd make a little date and go out together. We still are the best friends, all of us. We get
together every few weeks, every few months. Every one of us just, they were the ones who
turned out when I got my cancer diagnosis. They're like, "What can we do?" They drove me to
New York City, they drove me back, they got groceries for me. I mean, these guys were just the
greatest. So we just really had that esprit de corps that you don't often get in an office. We had no
toxic people in our office. We were very lucky for many years, and we all appreciated that. We
all knew it. And I think the college kind of recognized that, that we were a very functional office.
You could call us up and say, "We need a brochure," And we would crank that puppy out and it
would be a good brochure, or, "We need a story about this in the magazine," and we'd figure out
a way to do it, and it got done.
So we were pretty pleased with that. Yeah, we thought we were doing pretty well.
SB:
Do you think that same positive energy permeated the campus in general in those years?
SR:
It did. I think it mostly did. I know there were some griping and problems and troubles in some
offices and some departments. But yeah, in general, I think it did. I think that radiated from
David as much as anything. He's such a performer, such a punster, you know?
SB:
David Porter, right?
SR:
Yeah, David Porter. It just it was hard not to be charmed by David. So that was kind of his role, I
think. And he was just so academically strong too that you had to admire him and you had to be
charmed by him. And I do think, from what I gather, he kind of let people do their jobs for the
most part. And everybody wanted to work for him and work for his people. I think it was, at least
in the administrative side, yeah, yeah, pretty good.
There's tougher offices. The fundraising office is tough. You got to look at numbers at the end of
each year and did you meet that number? Whereas what we look at is a physical magazine or a
brochure and go, "Isn't that pretty?" Much easier to sort of see the result, you know? You never
get a magazine and go, "Oh, that just really sucks." But if you're in fundraising, you're like, "Oh,
damn, that sucks. We missed our number." The pressure must be terrible there. So we didn't feel
quite as much pressure, although it was deadline, deadline, deadline, deadline, deadline. But in
the end, you got something nice out of it, and most people would say, "Oh, that's great. Thanks."
SB:
That's wonderful.
So looking back on your years at Skidmore, what are the major events, initiatives in which you
take pride?

Page 11 of 16

�SR:
Well, mostly they're just the silly side stuff, you know? I really enjoyed being on the Campus
Environment Committee. I chaired that for about maybe five years or so. And that was a really,
again, kind of a collegial effort. Sue Van Hook from Biology was involved in that a lot too in
those days. And we had maybe a student rep or two and a couple other reps and somebody from
facilities, that was really good. We did some good stuff. We put up some signs in the north part
of the North Woods, behind the Skidmore stables. We kind of liaised a little bit with the bike
riders who used that area. We put on a little campus forum, which a fair number of people came
to, 100 or so, just to talk about campus environment in general and what were the priorities. So
that, I think, was really fun. Frustrating in a way because we had no power at all. All we could do
was advise. But I enjoyed that a lot. Again, it got me sort of in touch with folks I wouldn't be in
touch with otherwise, like the facilities guys.
So that was interesting. I did a lot of reunions. I avoided commencement for the most part
because commencement is not my thing, but one of our writers loved to go to commencement,
thank God. Because after a while you've done like 20 reunions. You're like, "What can we do
now?" But I got into video, which I really enjoyed. So I made a bunch of videos that once we
had the news on the website so much, I made a video. I got a GoPro and made a video
underwater of a student swimmer. That was really fun. I made a video about summer research
involving frog eggs and microscopes and stuff. That was really cool. So I figured out how to get
the microscope into the video and followed the kids as they did their work.
So I liked all that. What else did I do? Oh, probably the funnest thing I ever did was just one
night, which was the employee talent show that the kids put on. I don't know who did it. It was
for charity. I don't remember what group of kids it was. But they really organized it well, and
they put out a call for the employee talent show, and it was held at the dance theater, and at the
time I had a second dog, standard poodle named Dinah, who everybody knew because she came
to campus and she was this like the nicest dog. And I had done, along with trick training, doggy
dancing with her, which is so embarrassing, but so much fun. So I said, "Well, Dinah and I will
come and dance," and they said, "Oh, great."
So they had probably 8 or 10 acts. They had like Bernie Possidente from Biology doing banjo.
They had somebody who was sort of a singer-songwriter in her spare time who did some stuff.
They had Mariel Martin, the diversity person, whose talent was she could tie a cherry stem with
her tongue. So she gets up on stage, she's got a bowl of cherries, and there's a monitor with her to
assure that it's actually tied, because she's so far away from the audience. So this monitor is
watching that she ties and then holds up the tied cherry stem to great applause. It was hilarious.
And then Dinah was the last act, and we did a dance to, “There she was just walking down the
street, singing do wah diddy diddy dum diddy do”. And she could walk backwards, and she
could go between my legs, and she could spin backwards. The crowd went nuts. So that was
hilarious, I got to say. And again, the crowd was faculty, staff, students, local folks. I had
somebody, a friend of mine came from western Mass. just to see it. It was just such a great
group, and the vibe was so good. That's a Skidmore-y thing to do, you know?

Page 12 of 16

�SB:
Do you remember approximately what year that might have been? Like late '90s, something like
that?
SR:
It might've been, yeah, early 2000s. I could look it up because I think I have a video from it, and
the video is probably dated. Oh, yeah, the video is hilarious. And the great thing about Dinah
dancing was that it was Dinah and the Dinettes, because I didn't want to just be on the stage
alone, so I recruited Kate Greenspan from English and Wendy Anthony from the archives in the
library, both dog people, and they got all duded up like, I don't know, like the Ronettes or
something, I guess. They had red lipstick, and Dinah wore a little red collar, and I was all in
black, so I was kind of the puppeteer and not really seen, but I had a red tie to match Dinah. And
so they come dancing in in their little skirts. And so they were doing all the little doo-wop dances
behind me and Dinah. It was to die for, I got to say.
So again, this mix of people, I don't think Kate and Wendy really knew each other that much, but
we did like three rehearsals in the lobby of Palamountain or something and then we went on.
They drank like a bottle of wine between them in the green room. So it was a good show.
SB:
Oh, that's a wonderful anecdote.
SR:
It was good. Yeah, it was really good.
SB:
So we probably have covered the question of some of the greatest challenges that you've
experienced. That is one of our standard questions. Anything else you want to say? I think
we've...
SR:
I mean, yeah, the challenges are just sort of personal - people who are crappy bosses.
SB:
Okay.
SR:
So, yeah. Don't necessarily want to go there.
SB:
Enough said.
SR:
Yeah, exactly.

Page 13 of 16

�No, I think switching to the magazine was hard. It was a big deal. But we had a great designer, a
freelance designer that we worked with for years. It all came together really nicely. Yeah, we had
a good run.
SB:
Well, and it's still a successful publication. It's a wonderful publication.
SR:
Good, okay. I haven't seen that in ages.
SB:
Great legacy.
SR:
Okay.
SB:
So what have you been doing since retirement?
SR:
Retirement is the best. As much as I loved my job, retirement's even better. I thought I would do
some freelancing, and I told folks at my office that I would do some freelancing. They called me
up and I said, "Nope, don't want to." So much to my surprise, I just didn't want to.
So the main thing I've been doing is training a donkey. I was always into horses, but my back is
bad, so I haven't ridden or done horses for a long time. But I've stayed in touch with people, and
Barbara Melville, the writer that I worked with, has a couple of horses at a nearby barn. So I was
there a little bit visiting, and the manager of that barn has a couple of horses of her own and also
got a donkey, because what they do there is clicker training, which is the all-positive way of
training, and you can train a flatfish, you can train a human, you can train a cat, a dog, anything,
because you click when they do the right thing, you give them a treat. So the click says that
instant is when you did the right thing, and then quickly here's a treat, and you do nothing else
pretty much. So you don't say, "No, that was wrong. Stop doing that." You just wait until they do
the right thing, you click, and pretty soon, any animal, including humans, will learn, "I need to
do more of this. I'll get the treats."
So this donkey, she [Barbara] had trained to walk nicely, and she just thought it'd be fun to
clicker train another species. But then she adopted a few race horses and got involved rehabbing
them, and the donkey was getting bored. So the donkey, being a donkey, was breaking out of his
stall, breaking out of the paddock. He'd run up and down the aisles of the barn and eat
everybody's treats. He was just being a problem. So I thought, "Why don't I try? I've trained
horses a little bit, I've trained dogs a lot. I'd love to train a donkey. I love donkeys." So I asked
her if I could come and teach him some tricks, and she said, "Sure." And she said, "But first of
all, don't get hurt." And I thought, "Oh, God, what am I doing?"

Page 14 of 16

�But I started teaching him tricks, and he loved it, and we've been doing it three times a week ever
since for like five years now. So he can do many fine tricks. He can stand on a pedestal and
pirouette around it. He can push a baby carriage across the arena, and then he takes out of the
baby carriage a toy donkey and walks up to the pedestal and waves the donkey up and down. He
bops a great big beach ball all over the place.
He can play all kinds of music. He can play the keyboard with his nose. Very horrible-sounding,
but he loves it. He loves when he can discover that he makes a noise. He likes to knock things
over and watch them fall, and he likes to make a noise. So he can play the keyboard, and then I
taught him to play the high-hat cymbals by pressing on the pedal with his hoof. I actually went
out to a garage sale and spent a hundred dollars on a drum set. And so he plays the high-hat
cymbals, which he really likes because they go crash. At first, he was afraid of them, but with
clicker training, you train them not to be afraid and gradually. So now he slams his foot on the
cymbals, and he plays the bicycle horn, which he just bites the bulb of it. So he has quite the
bandstand now all set up with music.
So he's just great. I'm just constantly trying to think of new things to teach him. So now I'm
teaching him colors. He can tell two colors apart. It's amazing what they can do. So that's been
really fun, just being part of that barn and having not only Barbara Melville there with her horse
and doing the training, but also Mary Parliman, the designer, who's still a friend. Both of us have
come, and she's playing with horses, which she never used to do. So it kind of just continues.
The office is not really broken up yet even though we're all retired.
SB:
That's a lovely story. It makes me think that we should consider having a retiree talent show.
SR:
There you go. That would be a hoot. Oh my God, that would be a hoot. Yeah. Some retirees are
doing some really cool stuff.
SB:
So is there anything else we should talk about in terms of your years with us?
SR:
What else? I mean, I was there for so long.
I think I've covered a lot of it. I mean, I would say I had so much interaction with so many
different people, like we also had editorial boards that we put together with alumni like once or
twice a year. And we had some alums in journalism and alums in other fields. We had one of the
former editors of the Skidmore News when it was really, really good, Yenso Lin, who's now an
international lawyer, I think. So we just had so many kind of fun, and collegial, and deeply
professional, and also really fun interactions. It was great.
One thing I didn't want to have to do as Campus Environment Committee chair was break up a
student camp in the woods. That was kind of too bad, but it was sort of famous, Camp Nasty. It
probably was pretty nasty. But it was because there was a kid named Nat who kind of started it,

Page 15 of 16

�and they used to call him Nat Nasty or something, I guess. But yeah, we had to go and tell them
like they really couldn't live in the North Woods for many reasons.
But no, it was good. I think I covered everything. I mean, Skidmore helped, not just when I got
sick, but they sent me to CASE conferences, which were really useful because there was not just
the schmoozing of most CASE conferences. The editors of magazines had their own editors
forum, and it was seminars and really picking the minds of other editors of other good
magazines, and they were the ones who ran the magazine contests. And so those were really
good. Went to several of those. Yeah, Skidmore let me take a video-making course in the
summer along with students so that I could make the videos, let me buy a video camera for the
office. So yeah, yeah, a lot of fun stuff. The fun just kept happening.
SB:
Wonderful. Well, this has been absolutely delightful.
SR:
Okay. Well, good. Me too.
SB:
Thanks much for being with us.
SR:
Of course, of course. Thank you.

Page 16 of 16

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                    <text>Interview with Patricia Poirier by Sandy Welter, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, February 14, 2024.
SANDY WELTER: This is Sandy Welter. I am here interviewing Pat Poirier for the Skidmore
Retiree Oral History Project. It is Monday, February 19th, 2024 and we are in the
Scribner Library, room 222. Good morning, Pat.
PAT POIRIER: Good morning.
SW: Before we start talking about your work at Skidmore, tell us about where you were born,
where you grew up.
PP: I was born right here in Saratoga. My parents had moved back from California, where my
brother and sister were both born, because my grandparents were here. And so, I was
born here. I was raised in Schuylerville and I live across the street from the house I grew
up in. So, I'm a native and I haven't moved very far.
SW: And so, as a native Saratogian, how did you come to begin working at Skidmore?
PP: My sister-in-law worked in Dining Services forever and a day. We were talking and she
suggested that I apply for a job here, and I did. And they were, at that time, doing the
Wide Horizon Campaign. It was 1979. First of all, before that, I worked in the President's
Office for Joe Palamountain for a couple weeks. They had been traveling, and Nancy
Glass was his secretary. And she was out on leave for whatever reason, so they needed
somebody to help catch things up before they came back from wherever they had traveled
to. So, I worked there for a couple weeks.
And then Wide Horizon Campaign was going on, and somehow or other my resume
ended up in what at that time was called External Affairs with Nancy Lester. She was the
class of '58, and she was Assistant Director. Anyway, and that's how I ended up here.
And I was temporary for a couple years, and then I think they forgot that I was a
temporary employee. And I got pregnant and I called and I said, "Can I come back to
work? I'm still temporary." And they didn't realize it, so they made my position a
permanent position, made it retroactive to 1979 when I started. That was 1983, so they
made it retroactive to 1979, and I got my benefits. That's how that ended up.
SW: When you first went to work there, it was not called Advancement at the time.
PP: It was called External Affairs at that time.
SW: Okay, and your job when you first got there was to do what?
PP: The Wide Horizon Campaign was going on, so what I did was prepare committee kits. The

Page 1 of 6

�Development officers would go out and create committees in various areas of the country
to solicit alumni in that area. And there were kits to help them do that. We had to put
together biographical information on the people in that area and include gift envelopes.
The Development officers hosted kickoffs, which were alumni gatherings to get as many
people from that area together and explain why Skidmore was raising money for the
Wide Horizon Campaign. It's different from the Annual Fund. It's a capital campaign.
Skidmore was still building this campus at the time. So I did that kind of stuff. And then
when the Development officers came back, I updated records on alumni, any information
that came in. We found a lot of people at that time. There wasn't a real good system for
keeping track of our alums and parents and everybody. Actually, the Wide Horizon
started that process in vigor to get it going.
SW: What was the purpose of the Wide Horizon Campaign? What was their goal?
PP: When I started here they broke ground for the Phys Ed Center. They still had dorms to build
and classroom buildings. And the trustees had said, "You can build, but you have to have
50% of the money in hand before you can break ground for a building." That was the
rule. I don't know if they are still following that rule, but that's back then. So the goal for
that campaign was $12.4 million dollars, which seems like nothing compared to what the
campaigns are now. Because the whole campus was not all here on North Broadway, I
believe, in 1979 there were still some students over on Union Avenue. And I don't
believe any classes were there, but they were still housed over there, some of them. So
the goal was to get the dorms built, I think. I don't remember that.
SW: And the campaign was successful?
PP: Oh, yes. It went over the goal, but I don't remember the dollar number. But yes, it was
successful.
SW: So from that first campaign experience, how did your job evolve? And when did this
department, this area, become renamed Advancement? Do you remember?
PP: I don't remember it when it became Advancement. I want to say when I started, David Long
was Vice President. And then I think Dick Seaman was my next Vice President. And I
believe he changed the name to Advancement, but I could be wrong. I'm not sure on that
one.
SW: So when you came to Skidmore, you were working under President Palamountain.
PP: President Palamountain, yes.
SW: So you've worked under how many other presidents during your tenure?
PP: I think there were five. It was Joe Palamountain, David Porter, Jamie Studley. Who came

Page 2 of 6

�after her? Did Phil come after her? Phil Glotzbach, so there were only four. I retired
before Mark Connor came. Yeah, and Joe Palamountain, he was fun to work with.
SW: What makes you say that? Can you give us an example?
PP: When I first came here, I was 21 and I was scared to death of a PhD, but he and Anne were
just the most welcoming people. One time when I had moved over to Advancement, we
had a wall that separated our office from the Provost, and Joe came in and talked to the
Provost a lot. We had been blowing bubbles over the wall, and I said to the girl on the
other side, "You're going to get me in trouble. Stop blowing bubbles. Stop blowing
bubbles!" And I stood up on a chair and looked over, and it was Joe Palamountain
blowing bubbles over the wall, and he was laughing. Oh my God, he was laughing. I said
"Well, I guess he can't get me in trouble." He was just a sweetheart. I loved all the
Presidents, actually.
SW: What a great story! So talk a little bit about some of the changes in your job over the years.
Did you see your job changing in some ways?
PP: I guess it changed a couple times. I always helped. There was another person in my original
position, of course. I moved around not by choice, but they moved me around to work for
various Development officers. I had to call and make appointments for them or
whatever else, make their travel arrangements. I did all of that for a while, but I really did
not enjoy that. When the person who had my position retired in 1990, Nancy Lester
slipped me right back into it. Back then, I guess you didn't have to do a whole big to-do,
advertise, or whatever. She slipped me right into it, and I really enjoyed it because we
went from doing address changes on paper and mailing them out and getting them back
and having to file what we called PRC cards, which were permanent record cards to
computerization then to the next computerization. Everything was instant instead of two
weeks out.
SW: Tell us about Nancy Lester.
PP: Nancy Lester was the class of '58. She graduated in May and started working here in June.
And I think she was here about 30 years. Personally, she could be tough, demanding in
how she wanting things done, but I always thought she was very fair. She was one of my
best supervisors, really. I really enjoyed working for her.
SW: Could you give us the title of the position that you held and maybe a little overview of the
work?
PP: My position technically was called Coordinator of Biographical Records. My main purpose
was to keep track of all the alums. They would call me when they moved, changed jobs,
got married, got divorced, passed away. I didn't write the obituaries, but I did all the
biographical collection of what they did through their lifetime when they passed away so
that the alumni news editor could write up an obituary for Scope. That's when we had
Scope and class newsletters all the time. Also, I had quite a list of people, until I retired,

Page 3 of 6

�that formerly worked here that wanted to know, especially the ... What do you call them,
the person who gets people to put us in their will? I forget what they are called.
I can't remember, but they wanted to know if one of their alums had passed away. A lot
of times, gift officers and other Skidmore people would go to funerals. I went to a couple
funerals because I had known the alums for years and had contacted them often. We
represented the College by going to the funerals. I did all of that. I did it for parents in
the summertime. I put all the incoming students and their parents on the database all
summer long because we solicit the parents also, or corporations. Any biographical
information came through me.
SW: What would you consider some of your major successes or your contributions to Skidmore?
PP: We have a bunch of alumni that we couldn't find. We called them lost alumni. I felt towards
the end of my career, with the advent of more computer search engines, that they were
out there and we could find them. I felt really good that we got our percentage of lost
alumni down to less than 10% out of however many we have now. That's not bad and a
major success. I am also proud of my diligence to keep track of alumni and the
connection I made with a lot of them. They knew me, especially the older ladies who
went back and forth to Florida in the wintertime. We call them snowbirds. They would
call me.
I had a couple I had to call when I retired and say, "I'm leaving now. You'll just have to
call the main office number now. You don't have to worry about it. It'll happen
automatically, but if you feel better calling" ... And I still keep in touch with a lot of my
friends. I have one student worker who worked for me just for a year, but we're still
friends. She graduated in '93, and we still get together occasionally. And a couple Board
members. Bill Ladd, he's a very close friend, was right there when my husband passed
away. He was on the phone, one of the first. He's a Ladd. I just want to say. I knew his
grandmother.
SW: Yes, Skidmore is like a family, and you were feeling very much part of the family.
PP: Yes, exactly.
SW: That's wonderful. We talked a little bit about challenges. Any struggles that you felt or
maybe even the changes you've seen over the years that you've been at Skidmore?
PP: The biggest challenge was when we converted databases. I had to speak up about things that
I kept track of that I felt had to be converted somehow and into the new system. I really
fought to be a part of the team that did the mapping and converting of data from one
database to another. I think we did three software changes while I was here. That was my
big thing. I was so protective of my records and I wanted them to get transferred
properly. We talked it out and figured out where to put things, and it worked. Then of
course afterward, as time went on, these conversions were smoother. Then you had to go
in and straighten things out a little bit afterwards.
SW: Right. Your work environment, where you worked in Advancement changed during the

Page 4 of 6

�course of your tenure, I think. Where were you first housed? Then wherePP: We were on fourth floor, Palamountain, which was the best place in the world to work. We
had the President's office. We had the Registrar's office. We had Financial Aid. Plus we
had the interaction with the students because they were always in the hall. We just loved
fourth floor Palamountain, but we outgrew it. Because as the College grew, we had more
people. We had to get more Development officers, so we moved over to North Hall and
then eventually the Alumni office. That section moved over to Colton House to give us
more room, and then they added on a section in the back of North Hall. We were
supposed to be there temporarily, but I think they're still there. So it hasn't moved.
SW: Yes. Your fondest memories? We mentioned a little.
PP: My fondest memory is a reunion. Even last year was the first year that I was able to get back
on Saturday to the reunion parade and the alums. I love them, especially the older ones.
Like I say, I knew Helen Filene Ladd. She was class of '22. Again, I was 22, so it was
1982. I was working her reunion, and a couple kids went down to the airport to pick her
up and lost her luggage. So she's standing there at the desk. I didn't know who she was.
Registration was at Case Center at the desk, and she's standing there.
I said, "May I help you?" And she said, "I'm Helen Filene Ladd, and they lost my
luggage. Oh my goodness, they're making a big to-do about it.” She was just a
sweetheart, but the older ladies, they're just so happy to come back here, so proud of the
College, the whole nine yards. And they always remembered us, those of us who worked
there. I just loved working the reunions. It was long hours, a long weekend, but it was
great.
SW: Is there anything else that you would like to add, any other reflections, any influential
people you might want to mention that you worked with over the years? You mentioned
the presidents. You mentioned the students and the alums, some of your colleagues, like
Nancy Lester. Anything else you would like to add to round out the picture of your life at
Skidmore?
PP: I was very fortunate to work with terrific Vice Presidents. All of them had their own
personalities. I was especially close to David Long up until he passed away. I still,
actually last week, had lunch with his wife. And I've kept in touch with Chris Hook, who
was one of my Vice Presidents. Michael Casey, I think was. No, he wasn't my last Vice
President. Sean Campbell was, but Michael Casey, such a tragic loss. Really sweet guy,
great to work for. Skidmore has a talent for hiring great people, really great people. Like I
say, I got along with most of the Presidents. I'll just put it that way, to put it
diplomatically.
But I love Phil, and Mark seems to be wonderful. At our retirement events, he's just so
welcoming. I just learned a lot about fundraising, about keeping track of money. I now
happen to be the financial secretary at my church, and I often say, "You can't do this. You
have to do it this way," just because of what I learned here, even though it's a much
smaller organization. But I learned a lot about the fundraising aspect of private
institutions and nonprofits, and it's amazing.

Page 5 of 6

�SW: And finally, you've continued your relationship with Skidmore through the RetireePP: The Retiree Initiative Program Group.
SW: Can you talk a little bit about what you're doing there?
PP: I'm just part of the group, but it's staying connected. I kind of worried when I left that I
would lose touch. I was here 41 years. It was my life; Skidmore saw me through every
major event in my life - my mother passing away, my father passing away, my husband
passing away. Skidmore was there. We were so close and such a family and they kept me
going. I just said, "I don't want to lose out on being a part of Skidmore." So being on
RIPG, it forces me ... I'm very much a homebody, so it forces me to participate. I come to
all the programs that interest me that are here. I plan the wine, cheese, and chat. I took
that over when somebody else didn't want to do it anymore. That is for welcoming the
retirees from the past year, and anybody else can come. Actually, Phil is going to speak
this year on that.
We also have a grant program for retirees as they have projects that they work on. I'm not
really clear on this, but I believe even if they volunteer someplace and this place needs
money for a special project, we will grant them money. Phyllis Roth, I didn't know this,
and I was in the Advancement office, but Phyllis Roth left a grant for retirees' projects.
So we have a budget every year that we can use for grants to support retiree initiatives. If
we want to take a trip, part of that is subsidized through her grant. And it's just nice. What
I like is I get to meet people that, like you, I talked on the phone, but we're all equals. I'm
not just one of the people keeping track of everything. We're professors. We're
administrators. We're support staff. There's a nice mix on the committee, and we all are
working. It's just wonderful. It's a wonderful experience. I love being on that committee.
SW: Well, we're so pleased that you were able to participate in our oral history project, Pat, and
your insights are invaluable. They're really wonderful. What year did you start at
Skidmore?
PP: I started January 15th, 1979, which was my birthday. And I retired January 15th, 2020,
which was very fortuitous for me, because where I live, at that time, we did not have high
speed internet. I don't know what I would have done because I couldn't work from home.
So I don't know. Something told me I had to retire at the right time, so I did. So, I had
exactly 41 years.
SW: Wonderful. We thank you so much and we wish you the very best. We look forward to
seeing you more at the RIPG programs. Thank you, Pat.
PP: Well, thank you. I'm so thrilled to be asked to do this. I really, really am.

Page 6 of 6

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                    <text>Interviewee: Charles (Chuck) Joseph
Years at Skidmore: 1985 – 2010
Interviewer: Rebecca Zosia Stern
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12866
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00:00:00 Header
00:36:00 Born in Pennsylvania
00:02:00 First experiences in music around church
00:04:00 Began college experience at West Virginia University
00:05:14 Began interest in Stravinsky in undergrad and went to University of Illinois
where interest blossomed.
00:7:00 Benefits of trading ideas on a college campus
00:7:45 Attracted to Skidmore because of Liberal studies program
00:09:16 Changes in Liberal Studies curriculum that required thinking in cross
disciplinary terms
00:10:50 Skidmore atmosphere was conducive to change, a lot of women faculty
00:11:40 Infusion with new faculty helped change curriculum
00:14:7 Describes city and Skidmore relationship
00:16:10 Introduced an ethnomusicology course with Professor Gordon Thompson
00:17:24 Conception of artists in residency program
00:20:30 Started to teach course with Isabella Brown on Stravinsky and Ballanchine
00:24:40 Beginning to plan a new music center that would become Zankel
00:34:50 Trying to capture music as it evolves to study academically
00:36:00 Discussing Stravinsky research with primary sources
00:44:00 Discussing later academic interests in Broadway musicals
0048:35 Daughter went to Skidmore as a dancer and studied American Studies
00:53:00 Skidmore fosters an environment to challenge conventional wisdoms
00:57:40 Interest in American Studies, and how culture changes

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Sam Brown: Hi, I’m Sam Brown for Skidmore Oral History. It’s February 22 nd and I’m in the
office of Robert Boyers. So I’d first like to ask you, Bob, if you could tell me where you were
born, and if you could just introduce yourself a little bit, that would be great.
Robert Boyers: Sure. I’m Bob Boyers. I was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1942, and I’ve been
teaching at Skidmore College since the summer, actually, of 1969.
SB: Generally, can I start by asking how you came to Skidmore?
RB: Well, I came to Skidmore in a rather unusual way. I had started a quarterly magazine called
Salmagundi out of my apartment in New York City in the middle 1960s when I was a graduate
student at New York University, and we managed to bring out—my friends and I had managed
to bring out several issues by the Fall of 1968 when I was contacted by the Provost of Skidmore
College—a man named Edwin Mosely who had thought about starting a magazine at Skidmore
College, and had gone to the Gotham book mart in New York City and had seen some copies of
Salmagundi, noted that they were published out of a post office box in New York City, and
thought that it would probably be a good idea to be in touch with me about bringing the
magazine to the college. So that’s, really, how I came to Skidmore. I came with a magazine.
SB: Can you tell me what your motivation was for starting the magazine, specifically?
RB: Well, you know, I had several motives. You know, I was a reader of magazines, obviously,
like other young intellectuals and so on. And I had begun writing for some of those magazines
very early on when I was a graduate student, before I began Salmagundi. I thought it was
something I might like to do. The idea had never actually crossed my mind—I mean, I was only
twenty-two when the idea finally did cross my mind—and it was placed there by a middle aged
professor named Henry Pachter who was the dean of The New School for Social Research in
Manhattan. I won’t tell the whole story—I’ve actually written it up in other places. He was a
man I got to know in 1964 and he basically put the idea in my head, and encouraged me to do it,
and put me in touch with all sorts of writers and intellectuals that I admired. And with that, I was
able to figure out how to launch my own magazine. So, that was sort of the origin of the idea,
and of course, you know, one’s motives and ambitions are various under those circumstances.
Obviously, I was interested in finding an outlet for certain things that I and my friends wanted to
write which, at the time at least, was not very easy for us to place in other magazines including
very long and demanding essays that we were writing and wanted to continue to write. So there
was that sort of thing, but then, also, we were interested in finding a way to bring together
politics in the arts in a way that really wasn’t often done in other magazines right at that moment.
I mean, there were magazines like the most famous of them: Partisan Review, which managed to
publish material on politics and material on the arts, and literature, and film, and so on. But we
wanted to do something that was a little different. We wanted to do politics and literature at the
same time—to publish articles that engaged with both politics and literature in the same
framework and we managed to do that right from the beginning. The only other ambition I’ll
mention—I mean there were others—but, really, I was, myself, very taken with the very lengthy
essays that were published in the middle of the nineteenth century in the English quarterlies like

�the Edinburgh Review and the Westminster Review—the kinds of articles I loved and studied by
writers like John Stuart Mill, and Thomas Carlyle, and John Ruskin—those kinds of writers. And
really, there was no other magazine in the United States in that moment which reached a large
general, educated readership that would accommodate materials of that length. We began to do
that right from the start. The second issue of Salmagundi has a very lengthy article on the politics
of Jean-Paul Sartre. And we’ve done that throughout the history of the magazine. So that was
one of the things that we had in mind to do which we actually did.
SB: Can you talk a little bit about how Skidmore facilitated Salmagundi and how it fit itself into
the campus right when you got to Skidmore?
RB: Well of course, the bottom line really was that Skidmore provided a budget and offices and
a couple of student assistants. We had two student assistants. We had very modest offices. Our
offices are, now, much more extensive than they were at the time, and we did have, really, a tiny
budget—but it was a budget nevertheless. There was no salary for anybody who worked at the
magazine, accept for the student assistants, but we had money for mailing and we had a print
budget to pay a printer. This was extraordinary. I had managed to support the magazine out of
my own pocket for four years which was very difficult to do, and it was wonderful to have this
kind of support. In terms of fitting in at Skidmore; that always been not so very easy to tell you
the truth. Most academics, then and now, are really not terribly interested in most things outside
the framework of their own academic specialty, and Salmagundi is, by definition, a magazine
that encompasses all sorts of different things. So, we always had a small cadre of people at
Skidmore professors, and students, and so on who were enthusiastic about the magazine, but
most people at the college were not terribly enthusiastic or interested in one way or the other.
And that was okay—that was fine. I mean, for one thing, what it meant was that we didn’t have
any interference in the running of the magazine. There weren’t enough people out there to be
terribly interested in it one way or another, as I say. So there was no impulse to become angry
about anything that the magazine doing or failing to do. So that was very useful. But, from the
start, we wanted to insert the magazine into the life of the college which is what Edwin
Mosley—the Provost of the college—had wanted right from the start. So, from the moment I got
here, we began sponsoring the kinds of events that otherwise would never have unfolded at this
college. Mainly, we began to sponsor and run conferences—many of them two or three day
affairs in which major thinkers, writers, scholars, intellectuals would be brought together and
asked to sit around a table for three days or so to debate an important subject. The first of those
that we sponsored was actually in 1970, and over the years we’ve done more than thirty of those
conferences at the college, and that’s one of the ways in which we hoped to develop the
intellectual life of the institution. As I say, most of the faculty here were not terribly interested in
or committed to those events, and, in fact, didn’t show up at those events. But it’s been a great
thing for the faculty and the students who were interested. And, you know, at any given time
there were certainly at least a couple dozen faculty members who were invested in what we were
doing and many of those faculty, in fact, participated as speakers in some of those conferences. I
will say a very considerable proportion of those faculty members were always in the English
department rather than other departments, and that’s always been a source of surprise and
disappointment to me after all of the many years I’ve been here. But it’s just a fact of life I’ve
learned to accept.

�SB: I was wondering if you could turn now to when you first came to Saratoga Springs and your
personal experience of coming to Skidmore as a younger man.
RB: Well, I mean, the college was somewhat smaller in those days for one thing and when I
arrived here we were moving between the old campus in town and the current new campus
which wasn't all built up when I arrived here in the late 60's and so on. The place you know of
course, in terms of the faculty, certainly wasn't quite as strong then as it's become. We have a
much larger proportion of the current faculty right now who are doing significant scholarly work.
Many fewer faculty in the late 60's and 70's who were here when I arrived, were doing really
significant creative and scholarly work, so that was an important difference. Over the years I've
watched all sorts of development in the student body. The students in the late 60's and early 70's
were terrific they were very good, then there was a long period of time, a considerable stretch of
time, when Skidmore was having a very hard time as many previously male colleges and
universities began to accept women and began to compete with Skidmore for women students.
So I would say for a period of at least a decade and a bit more, there was a considerable decline
in the quality of students we were getting. I mean we always had a number of very good
students, but it wasn't until the early 1990's that we began to have the kinds of students that we
have become accustomed to over the last 25 years or so where most of our students are actually
quite good and many of our students are superb. And again, we went through a period where
things were very different.
SB: Can you talk a little bit about how gender changed the dynamics of the classroom?
RB: Well you know, it's funny because when I came in Skidmore was a women's institution but
only for a year or so and in fact in the yearbook for the graduating class of May 1970, because I
was a young radical, very radical faculty member at the time, the students asked me to write for
their yearbook an article promoting co-education, which I did. And of course I argued that it
would be good for everyone including the women at the institution and so on if we took in men.
But there was a lot of opposition to that—some of it from current students—but a lot of it from
alums. They really felt that the character of the institution would change drastically and in a very
unfortunate way. Many of the women I spoke to at the time argued on the basis of experience
that they had heard from other people that as soon as male students came into Skidmore, the
male students would sort of take over the institution. More or less at once it was said that the
Skidmore News, the newspaper would be taken over by males, the literary magazine would be
taken over by males, the college government association positions would be taken over by males
and so on. It never really happened that way, the fears were exaggerated. I felt they would be
exaggerated and although I've been wrong about many things over the course of my years at the
college that was one area in which I happen to have been right. The men did not take over the
institution. We had strong and brilliant women here in the student body over all of the years and
we never had any of that kind of problem in that transition. Of course for awhile, Skidmore
wanted to attract male students and had a very hard time doing so and a considerable proportion
of the male students we did attract were not nearly to the level of the women students we had,
but again, after awhile that began to change and you didn't feel that that was any longer the case.
So again, my long years here have been a time when we have watched all sorts of changes taking
place. But in terms of the gender problem, I really haven't felt that that has been a significant
thing at least in my own experience of the classroom and the institution as a whole.

�SB: Can you talk a little bit about how the English Department has changed over the years and
how it has grown. I understand you play a big role in hiring faculty members.
RB: Yes, for many years I was on the Hiring Committee and the Personnel Committee here and
until quite recently in fact our Personal Committee in the department was also the Hiring
Committee. We didn't have, for most of the years I've been at the college, separate committees
assembled to hire a person for a particular position. Again, the people who were on the
Personnel Committee, who were elected to that committee, handled not only assessment, which
is to say reappointments, tenure, promotions and all of the hiring. So I was involved in hiring, I
had a hand in it, I wasn't the person in charge of it, but I had a hand in it and in the hiring just
about everybody who is in the department now and that was a wonderful opportunity to be
involved in that. The department has changed in a great many ways, and it's hard to say exactly
how. I mean you could point to particular areas where the changes have been dramatic. For
example, when I came in there was a poet named Lawrence Josephs who taught a poetry
workshop each year. He had an academic background and he was a good but not well-known
poet, he did not have a book of poems. He was a man, when I came in, who was in his fifties
and he had been here for quite some time. We didn't have a creative writing faculty at all, we
didn't have a fiction writer on staff. There was no such thing as creative non-fiction. And again,
the only person who taught the poetry workshop was this one man Lawrence Josephs and so I
and a number of other people began to fight for the idea that to be credible and to offer creative
writing in a serious way, we had to recruit and hire creative writers who were significant authors
and had well received books to their credit and so on, and who would basically be hired for that
purpose. They wouldn't just be professors with PhD's in an academic subject who felt they could
teach a course in fiction and so on, which by the way was never taught when I originally came in
at Skidmore. So that was one very significant change and as I say I was one of the people who
fought very hard for that. Other areas were very different, we often had considerable battles
within the department about whether or not we wanted to hire people specifically to teach
freshman composition. Many people felt that it was a good idea for everyone to teach freshman
composition, not to hire a separate cadre of people who only did that. But basically over the
years I think we sort of have all adapted to the situation as its evolved. And the college as a
whole, again I think the faculty certainly has become stronger and in recent years, the student
body has become stronger. So I would say in general Skidmore is at a pretty good place right
now. I mean I could get into all sorts of parochial matters that are still struggling about but
probably not of great interest to people who are not academics themselves. For example, the
relationship between theory and what we call primary literature itself. In my own estimation in
the profession of literature these days we have lots of people who are entering English
Departments who are primarily interested in theory and have very little interest in Literature
itself. I think that is very unfortunate. People in my generation generally went in to college
English teaching because they were passionate about poetry and fiction and such things. We
were interested in ideas, some of us like myself were intellectuals who write about all sorts of
issues and topics and so on. But our passion is really about poetry and fiction and the primary
texts and the arts and so on. I think my sense has been that many people in the profession, and
that includes some people at the college as well, are not that interested in literature for its own
sake. They are interested in it for the uses they can make of it in connection with their own
theoretical investments, which I think is fine as long as they don't communicate that feeling in

�the classroom. In so far as they do, my sense is that the students are not getting what they aught
to get when they enroll in classes in Literature. But again, that's just one view and there are
many other views that are held by very smart people who see things rather in a different way.
SB: I was wondering if you could tell me a little bit about the New York Summer Writers
Institute and how that has cemented itself into Skidmore.
RB: Yeah that's another one of those things that certainly to me came as an enormous surprise.
You know I'm not by temperament or disposition an administrator. There was a time years ago
when people would come to me and say you should be Chair of the Department or Dean of the
College or something and I'd say no, no I have no interest in doing something like that and I'm
not really good at that sort of thing. But 31 years ago Skidmore was approached by the novelist
William Kennedy who had just begun the New York State Writers Institute in Albany at the
State University. He had a dream of starting a summer program and thought that such a program
would be very attractive if it was started at a small liberal arts school like Skidmore and in a
town like Saratoga Springs. And so because of Salmagundi and my connections with dozens and
dozens of writers and so on, people who were approached thought I would be the obvious person
to direct such and institute and it seemed like a nice idea and I thought to do it for a short while.
I never really dreamed that I would feel like staying with it for a long time. Again, because it
involved a certain type of administrative function that really was not ever part of my ambition,
but I found that I liked it and that I was able to build the program into a national program over
the course of the first 5 or 6 years. I was given rather a free hand to do that and so the program
grew and I found that it was very important to me in a whole variety of ways, some of which
were personal some of which were professional. I could mention the personal that is sort of
interesting, in the sense that my wife, Peg Boyers, who was the Executive Director of
Salmagundi and an occasional writer of critical prose, sort of got the feeling after the first 8 or 10
years of the writers institute that she wanted to try to write poetry. She began to enroll in
summer courses first with the poet Robert Pinsky but then shortly thereafter with the poet Frank
Bidart and suddenly discovered that she was, lo and behold, a first rate poet and has now gone on
to publish three well received books of poems and so that has rather changed her life. Of course
I will always be grateful for the fact that the New York State Summer Writers Institute came to
me and that I was able to make something of it because it gave my wife this whole extraordinary
unexpected career, so there was that. But there was another aspect of it that was through the
Writers Institute I became close to dozens of first rate writers who began to contribute their
writing to Salmagundi Magazine, which is a magazine that of course by that time had a large
national reputation as small quarterly but which for the most part could not have acquired the
first rate writing of many of those writers had we not developed personal relationships with
them. The simple reason is that we don't pay money. They can give that writing to national
magazines, so that's been an extraordinary benefit that I never imagined would come to pass
when I decided to take on the Summer Writers Institute. Of course it has been great to have the
program here at the college. Our public events 5 nights a week draw good audiences, every
night of the week in the auditorium and we get lots of publicity for the college all over the
country which is very important to the college and very important to me as somebody who has
been at the college for almost a half century. That has been wonderful. The truth is again most
faculty at the college don't have anything to do with the institute, don't come to the readings,
don't derive any benefit personally or professionally from it which is fine. The seats are filled

�every night in the auditorium from people far and wide who come to the events and so on and of
course we draw students to the workshops from all over the country, a small number of
Skidmore students enroll every year but we have students every year from major universities and
small colleges all over the country.
SB: I guess going back a little bit, to when you first came to Skidmore; I know there was a lot of
student protests happening at the time and I was wondering what the Skidmore student body was
like at the time and if you could compare it to the student body now a little bit.
RB: Well you know I think in the life of any institution the sort of student politics rises and falls
depending on the particular student cohort. In a school like Skidmore, a relatively small number
of students can change the atmosphere on the campus in extraordinary ways. When I say small
number, I really mean a small number, a dozen, fifteen, twenty students out of 2,000 or more
students could really mobilize energies on a campus like this in ways that are quite extraordinary.
In the late 1960's when I arrived it was an era all across the country of student radicalism and
student protest, but the truth is the overwhelming majority of students at Skidmore at the time
were not activists, whatever the sort of publicity that's sometimes put out by people who are
themselves activists and so on and remember fondly the "good old days" when..., I mean most
students then and now are invested in their academic work and their clubs and their teams and so
on and are not deeply invested in politics certainly not in radical politics. There was, however, in
the moment of the late 60's and early 70's, a considerable minority of Skidmore students who
were very involved in politics both on and off the campus. I was myself very involved in antiWar activities and Civil Rights activities on the campus. I was among a small number, it was a
very small number, of faculty members who were basically mobilizing student activism back at
that moment. But even then, there were considerable differences of opinion about what
mobilizing student activists should entail. If you like I can give you an example. At the time of
the Kent State killings in the Spring of 1970, which was the end of my own first year at
Skidmore College, there were student protests and lots of Skidmore students became involved,
many more that I could of imagined would be possible. I mean hundreds of students were
involved in on-campus marches and protests. We began to organize, that is 3 other faculty
members and I began to organize teach-ins which would address the war in Vietnam, the
question of student activism itself, Civil Rights issues as they were then emerging and so on.
And basically it was the tail end of the semester and it called a halt to classes. Many faculty
members were very angry about this, understandably I think it is fair to say, and I think this
history is available in back issues of the Skidmore New and Saratogian and that sort of thing
because obviously it really was newsworthy at least in this immediate local. On one of those
teach-in occasions, as we were moving into the second day of our sort of work stoppage and
student strike, we were moving toward the final exam period and one of the faculty, a full-time
member of the English department in Skidmore, a man about my age, in his mid twenties, a very
brilliant young man, got up and urged that we continue the strike right through the final exam
period that we simply force the cancelation of the exams. Many students were very upset about
this and spoke out at that meeting. And of course there were other faculty members who were
very upset about it and again I would say legitimately so and that seemed to me a very important
turning point. I as one of the leaders of this organization argued that this was not a good thing to
do to put students in jeopardy, students were about to graduate, they needed the course credits
and so on. My colleague and I had a ferocious public argument on the subject with lots of other

�people participating and basically his view was that these kinds of things are much more
terrifying in your imagination than they actually turn out to be in reality. My view was that no
actually they can be quite terrifying. People who have spent enormous sums of money and
suddenly find that they cannot graduate because they don't have the academic credits to do so
have real reason to be terrified and their parents have legitimate reason to be very upset and so
on and this is taking the whole thing too far. I don't pretend to be right about this sort of thing,
but I am pointing it out to suggest that these types of debates were going on at colleges and
universities all over the country and it took place here at Skidmore with hundreds and hundreds
of students very much involved. But you know over the years after that point there have been
intermittent student mobilizations and protests on behalf of one thing or another and again most
Skidmore students haven't been deeply involved in those mobilizations and its always very nice
to see an occasional sort of eruption of concern where there is a march or a student protest and so
on and it's nice to see that Skidmore students are in fact paying attention to what is going on out
there in the world. Of course many of those things unfortunately follow what might be called the
ideological fashion and lots of people jump on to a particular bandwagon only because it is the
thing that is being done all over the country at any given moment and of course that sort of
momentary fashion passes the interest in the issues disappears. I think we have seen that over
and over and over again and it's not really surprising, but it's the way of things and it is no
different in that sense at Skidmore than it is anywhere else.
SB: That was great. We are almost done, but I was wondering if there was anything specifically
that you would like to mention about Skidmore in general or about any specific anecdotes or
encounters with the Presidents like David Porter or anything like that.
RB: Well I have had in general, very warm relationships with the various administrations that I
have lived through. My sense is that the present administration, President Glotzbach and Beau
Breslin and so on are exceptionally good, smart and dedicated. We have our differences to put it
mildly, I mean that's what you would want, I mean I think that is what they would want, that
people are thinking about real issues have their differences. I've been very concerned frankly in
the last few years in the way I have been intimately over the last 25 years or so, about the, what
might be called the reign of political correctness on this campus and other campuses. That is an
area in which the present administration and I have some rather considerable differences of
opinion. Of course time will tell whether these differences are significant as they sometimes
seem to me to be. These kinds of problems having to do with political correctness and so on can
be very worrying when you think about the way they play out in the classroom, when you think
about the way they constrain open discussion and conversation of subjects in the classroom. It
can be very worrying if you think about the way they shape the recruitment of new faculty and
I'm frankly worried about those things. I've seen things recently over the years, especially
recently, which seem to me to suggest that these issues are more important right now than they
have been in the past and my sense is that administration typically runs scared when these kinds
of things erupt. They worry that the faculty will find them at fault, will censure them and then
they don't adopt the kinds of leadership that they are capable of. I haven't seen that just yet
occurring with the present Skidmore Administration but there are worrying signs at least for me
and some of my colleagues who are similarly worried, and I hope that our fears are, as they
sometimes are, exaggerated or misguided, but we will see.

�SB: Okay, last question. If you could talk about some of the things you are proud of and what
Skidmore has meant to you.
RB: Well you know of course I love to teach and I'm old enough to stop, to retire. I'm hoping to
keep going, which says a lot about what matters most to me and what I'm pleased about as I look
back over my years at the college. Every year for a very long time now at the alumni reunion in
late May early June I give a mini class on some subject or other and every year I have a very
large crowd turning out and of course many of them are people from a very long time ago who
studied with me many many years ago and are coming back to their thirtieth reunion or their
fortieth reunion that sort of thing. We get to see one another and remember the past and that sort
of thing and that is important to me when I know that these students from the past remember
these classes together as formative to them in some way and that of course is in some ways the
most important thing. A considerable cohort of students who become very close friends, whom I
see on a regular basis, come and stay with us for the weekend and that is sort of great. When we
had the last Salmagundi conference this past fall the 50th Anniversary conference, we had 7
former students who graduated in the past who came back for the 3 days, two of them flew in
from San Francisco, that was great to me. If you ask me what are you proud of what are you
gratified by...That. That is very important to me more than anything else in many ways.

SB: Great! Thanks a lot Bob
RB: You are welcome. By all means.

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                <text>Robert Boyers, came to Skidmore in 1969 as a professor of English and editor-in-chief of "Salmagundi Magazine," which has been housed at the College ever since. In this interview, Professor Boyers talks about the journal’s influence on campus and beyond, as well as his work as director of the New York State Summer Writers Institute.  He also describes his engagement with student activism in the early 1970's, as well as his continuing commitment to maintaining lively intellectual debate at the College.</text>
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                    <text>Interviewee: Ruth Copans
Years at Skidmore: 24 (1991-2015)
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Denver, CO
Date of Interview: February 22, 2023
00:00:00 Header
00:00:48 Grew up in Newburgh, NY. Learned bookbinding and book preservation in Paris;
realized would eventually need a library degree.
00:01:23 Interest in book preservation arose from fixing husband John’s used books.
00:01:48 Lived with family in Paris and studied in bookbinding studio.
00:02:15 Moved to Saratoga Springs when John was hired at Skidmore; eventually negotiated
an exchange of book preservation skills for studio space in Scribner Library.
00:03:00 First worked in Skidmore Administration, then other campus roles, then sought space.
00:03:35 Space was on fourth floor; worked on Special Collections, Victorian book collection.
00:04:02 Concurrently, earned library degree from SUNY Albany and worked in several
libraries, then hired as Skidmore’s librarian for Humanities and Special Collections.
00:05:14 Two major library renovations; first, a complete gutting and renovation.
00:05:50 When Peggy left, Copans became Interim Director for one year.
00:06:20 Newly hired director Barbara Doyle Welch stayed only eight months; Copans didn’t
want interim role again, so sought and was hired as permanent director.
00:07:27 Challenging time for academic libraries; tension between print versus electronic
material, in terms of budget allocations, ownership versus rental, etc.
00:07:48 Public libraries missions also evolving, but different missions than academic.
00:08:55 Academic: tension a reflection of the Internet in general — access to greater amounts
of material, but then became more important to teach how to distinguish quality of materials.
00:10:00 Did so by creating series of classes, partnering with faculty, staffing reference desk.
00:10:55 Goals: to keep students working in library, and for faculty to engage in that space too.
The new study rooms were important, especially as faculty were assigning more group projects.
00:11:40 Challenge: to keep up with technological changes.
00:12:00 Second renovation’s purpose was primarily to move IT Department into library.
00:12:49 Also provided faculty gathering space; “the more activities… in the library, the
better.”
00:13:26 Copans wanted people thinking of the library as a place of help.
00:14:35 Primary challenge: money! Another: making library space both respectful and lively.
00:15:40 Money challenge because departments wanted library to subscribe to many resources.
00:16:30 Negotiated money with Vice Presidents of Academic Affairs and of Financial Affairs.
00:18:10 Other Skidmore administrators Copans worked with during her tenure.
00:20:33 Fondest memory: getting the Carnegie Weill chamber musicians to perform in library.

�00:21:29 When Copans was Interim Director, she dreamed of having tea and music weekly.
00:21:59 Did host some faculty talks at noon. Eg. Mehmet Odekon discussed marble collection.
00:23:00 Embracing technology was perhaps biggest element of tenure as Director. Not just IT
department, but altogether. Eg. putting music CDs in more public, accessible space. Shifting
from idea of library possessing objects to borrowing/subscriptions.
00:24:48 Also important: understanding that the library had many functions, not just one.
00:25:15 A change: hired a head librarian (Marta Brunner) who didn’t have a library degree.
00:26:10 Dramatic change in the nature of libraries. Eg. used to have typewriter rooms.
00:27:00 Even once students all owned computers, many still preferred to work in library:
quieter, and also a less isolated environment.
00:27:48 Also had movies; VHS, DVDs for students to take out, plus some streaming services.
00:28:26 Money limited amount of material available, though library renovation added group
viewing rooms, which enabled more access to films.
00:29:10 Retired 2015. Great community of people, beautiful campus, great time for libraries.
00:30:25 Hard things happening in US at that time, but still really good years.
00:30:48 Since retiring, moved to be with children. In CA, volunteered with World Reader.
00:32:05 In CO, several volunteer projects with Denver Public Library Special Collections.
00:34:45 There was no Special Collections librarian when Copans started at Skidmore. Copans
got an endowment that covered part of salary and enabled purchase of materials; one area of
focus was collecting artists’ books; a particular help for art classes.
00:36:45 Other Special Collections materials included David Porter’s collection of classic texts,
Phyllis Roth’s vampire collection, a valuable Native American Indian book collection, etc.
00:37:30 Copans brought people in to Special Collections with presentations during Skidmore
Celebration Weekend, as well as worked with various classes to teach history of information.
00:38:18 Work with Special Collections was great counterbalance to work with technology.
00:39:10 Increasing need to help students distinguish important resources from among the vast
availability of materials.
00:40:00 Used to be library orientation classes for first year students, but not in many years.
00:40:50 Now rely more on faculty bringing classes; sometimes peer mentors bring groups in.
00:41:52 In first/big renovation, had some input into the Special Collections area.
00:43:04 In second, worked really closely with architects. That renovation included digging
space for IT and redoing first floor to make space for Help Desk and other IT offices, to keep
them integrated/accessible, not stuck “in the middle of nowhere.”
00:45:37 END

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                    <text>Interview with Ruth Copans by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History Project,
Denver, CO, February 22, 2023.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber on Wednesday, February 22nd, for the Skidmore Oral
History program of retirees. We are in Denver, Colorado, and I am interviewing Ruth Copans,
and … with the nice help of Susan Doherty. We are in Denver, Colorado, where Ruth has …
where Ruth is currently living. So, Ruth, tell us where you grew up and a little bit about your
background.
RUTH COPANS: Ok, well I grew up in a small town in New York, on the Hudson Valley,
called Newburgh. My background in terms of librarianship, umm … I started out as a fine
bookbinder; I trained in Paris to become a bookbinder. Then I went into book preservation work,
mostly realizing that I would need to work in libraries, and eventually realized that if I was going
to work in a library and wanted to make a living, I needed to get a library degree and be a
professional, which is what I did.
LG: How did you get interested in book preservation and such?
RC: Well I was married to a French professor who collected books, and we never had a lot of
money so he was always collecting falling-apart books [laughs], which needed a lot of
repair. So, um, and of course French books were often published in paperback, so the
issue became also learning how to bind paperback books. But then I was lucky enough to
go to Paris because we had family in Paris, so we could live with my uncle, who was my
father’s brother, and his Parisian wife in their apartment and I could study in a
bookbinding studio, and so I studied fine leather binding and did that for a while. Umm,
and that of course brought me back into library work, into preservation work, and once
we moved to Saratoga Springs, where John was teaching at Skidmore, thanks to you
[laughs], I exchanged my skills for studio space in the … what was the Scribner, the old
Scribner Library … um, which was …
LG: Now did you get a degree in librarianship?
RC: I did. I was working on it …
LG: From?
RC: From University of Albany. Yeah.
LG: And when was that?
RC: Ohh… I don’t know.
LG: Ok, sorry [laughs].
RC: Sometime, sometime in the ‘80s [laughs]. Sorry about my poor memory.

�LG: Ok, and do you remember when you came to Skidmore?
RC: Well John moved, we moved to Saratoga Springs in 1985. I was pregnant for our second
daughter then, so it took me a while to, um … I had a lot of bookbinding equipment
which I’d shipped back from France sitting in the garage, et cetera, so … obviously it
took me a couple of years. I worked first in the Admissions office, interviewing. I did a
bunch of stuff around campus. Um, … so eventually I, you know I had the hutzpah, I
guess, to go ask David Eyman if there was any space in the library.
LG: And David Eyman was, at the time?
RC: The director of the library, right. And there was, on the fourth floor where the Special
Collections were housed there was a small, empty, windowless room — actually the
whole floor — I used to call it my penthouse. And so he gave me that space and then I
had access to the Special Collections and I could pick and, you know, choose. I wasn’t
working on leather bindings but there were a lot of Victorian cloth bindings that needed
repair, so I worked on that collection.
LG: And for how long did you do that?
RC: Well, I did it for two or three years. Yeah, I got my library degree during that time, I
worked at SUNY Albany as a Preservation Assistant, I got a grant to spend three months
at Cornell working in preservation. Then I came back, worked part time in reference at
the public library, did a one-year replacement librarian position at Skidmore, and then,
when the Humanities Librarian was denied tenure, the Humanities position became
available. And because I had a Master’s degree in English Literature, plus my Library …
it was still a Library degree in those days, I applied and was a successful candidate to do
special, um … Humanities Librarian and the Special Collections. So I continued my
preservation work —- worked on the Special Collection. One of the candidates took a
look at the job description and said, “that’s three jobs!” But I was undaunted, of course,
because I wanted the job, because John was there, we lived close by, so, um … and I
loved the place! I loved Skidmore and I loved the library, so .. yeah.
LG: Good! Um, there were a lot of changes during your time.
RC: Oh, boy, yeah! I mean, we went through two major renovations! The first one Peggy Seiden
was the library …, David sort of oversaw, David Eyman oversaw the construction and the
renovation.
LG: Of the new building?
RC: Of the … the original. I mean, we’re still in the building which was the first one on the
campus, the new campus, to be built. So it was renovated once when we all moved down
to the gym. We moved the whole collection down to the gym. It was gutted and redone.
And that was under Peggy. Then Peggy left.

�LG: She went to Swarthmore.
RC: She did, she went to Swarthmore, where she still is, I think. Um, I … oh! [laughs]. A
neighbor of Bryn Mawr, where someone else graduated, which has the most amazing
collection of incunabula of, I think, any college in the country. But anyway, that’s neither
here nor there. Um, so when Peggy left I was an interim director for a year. We hired a
replacement for Peggy who left eight months later, and then …
LG: Who was that?
RC: Ah, Barbara Doyle Welch. Yeah, well she was sort of fleeting … And then, um, the then
Dean asked me to be a …
LG: And the Dean was?
RC: At that point … a psychology professor, what was his name? He was also short lived. You
know who I mean, though, right? He and his wife both came.
LG: Okay.
RC: … I’ll remember but I don’t.
LG: Alright.
RC: But in any case I said, “I’m not coming back as interim. I can’t get anything done, I’m
treading water. Look at my resume compared to all the resumes we looked at. Either hire
me back as a permanent director, or, you know, find somebody else.” So they gave me
the job. Which was, you know, like good news-bad news, because it wasn’t really what I
wanted to be doing but the …
LG: And when you got the job, were you still in your temporary quarters or had you …?
RC: No, we moved back into the library before Peggy left. She was there for all the celebrations
and she, you know, she stayed for a while. Yeah, so that was, you know, a challenging
time already. I mean the building was in good shape. We weren’t questioning that. We
had a good teaching room, we had a lot of good spaces, umm … but, you know, it was
the … it’s been a dynamic time in libraries for a very long time now, and certainly,
especially, academic libraries. You know, public libraries have a different mission,
although their mission has certainly been evolving. When I look at the Denver Public
Library, where I volunteer now, umm, I see that every day. It’s a, you know, a haven for
homeless, among other things. Yeah, they have social, right inside the door they have
social services available, and bathrooms, and public computers … but anyway, that’s not
academic libraries, that’s public libraries. Our tension became one, of course, of analog
versus digital, print material versus electronic material. You know, when I came the print
budget was much more significant than the electronic budget. By the time I left it was

�completely the opposite. And so that was a really … um, stressful change. It was like
moving from ownership to rental, because we weren’t owning things, necessarily,
anymore. And we were paying on a continuous basis for access to material, on one hand.
On the other hand we were giving access to our students to a wealth of material that they
never, in a million years, could have had access to otherwise.
RC: Um, so it feels a lot like it’s a reflection of the Internet in general. I mean, we all have such
amazing access; um, on the other hand, too much is not necessarily good either. But one
of the things that was very clear is, our students’ attention spans seem to be decreasing.
So, you know, they were hungry for short material. No one wanted to sit there and read a
600 page book, necessarily, but access to scholarly material became really important.
Especially because their instinct was always to just go to Google, do a search, stick on the
first page, take the first couple of articles they could find, no matter what the quality was.
So a lot of the challenge was saying, “We have fantastic material that’s available. Let us
help you actually find this material.”
LG: And how did you do that?
RE: We did that by, you know, creating a whole series of bibliographic instruction classes. We
tried very hard to partner with faculty to get them to bring their classes in so we could
teach them how to do research, and if they had a topic that they were working in, that
made it all the easier. And of course we did it also by staffing the Reference Desk —
being available to students, especially in the evening.
LG: I was just going to say, “Student time.”
RE: Yeah, exactly. Evenings. I mean, we did weekends but obviously we stopped doing
Saturday afternoons because that was not a time when students were necessarily looking
for help, but we did Sunday afternoons and evenings. Really. I assume they are still doing
them. Yeah.
LG: Um, what kind of goals, then, did you have once you moved into this new building and, um,
RC: Yeah. I mean, it’s … so for me, what I understood was that we needed to keep students
coming to the library to do their work, and we needed faculty to also engage with that
space, and we had created, in that first renovation there were a lot of study rooms, which
were very important for students because faculty were moving towards group projects,
especially in some of the heavily populated majors like Business, so there were a lot of
spaces which had wonderful facilities available to students to use. Um, the challenge was
to keep up on the electronics because that changes so much and because the students
were always five steps ahead of us in terms of understanding what they wanted and how
to use it, and because often their presentations use technology. So at that point in time the
IT department was a separate entity in a separate building. So over time my big challenge
became renovating the building once again to incorporate the IT department into the
library.

�LG: And do you have any idea when that happened?
RC: Well, if I retired in 85, it was done in 83. I’ve got the wrong dates here. 2000 … I retired in
2015. I was on sabbatical in 2013, and the project was done, so it must have been
between 2011-2012, that that was done. And that was huge but it felt very important, and
at the same time, what had been our staff room I gave to the faculty for the, a little faculty
study area. I can’t even remember what it’s called … the Weller Room, in the library, for
gatherings of faculty, because I felt like we needed faculty — we had moved the teaching
faculty, the art historians who had been in the building, out of the building, and taken that
space over as part of the IT department as well, so the fact that it was organic at that point
felt very, very important. And the more activities that were going on in the library, the
better off I felt we were in the long run.
LG: Um, did you institute the Help Desk for technology?
RC: No, that was the IT Department. It had been, in the early days it had been in a different
building.
LG: Right.
RC: But having that … having it in such a prominent place in the middle of the campus is what
became important to me.
LG: So that was their undertaking?
RC: It was my undertaking with the architect and the head of IT, who was Justin Sipher at the
time. Justin and I met with the architect about the renovation and I wanted the Help Desk
there, because again, I wanted people coming into my building. I wanted them thinking
about it as a place of help. It’s kind of the joy of being a librarian. I didn’t have to grade
students, I just needed to be there for them, and that’s what the Help Desk felt like. Not
just students but faculty as well. Which is why we had some, you know, study carrels for
faculty as well.
LG: So if you had to make a list of what the challenges were?
RC: Oh money!! [laughs]
LG: Ok.
RC: Student behavior. You know, trying to keep a space that felt respectful. Um, you know,
students have a tendency, especially, you know — you don’t like your roommate so
where are you going to go? Well, a great place to hang out is the library. But, no, we …
people were sometimes dealing drugs. There was a Facebook page in those days: “I
definitely have had sex in the library.” It, you know, I wanted it to be a scholarly
environment if I could. But I also wanted it to have a certain liveliness. I mean, I took all
of the “Do Not” signs down. When they first renovated it you couldn’t eat, you weren’t

�supposed to talk on your cell phone, blah blah blah. People were sort of struggling with
all those issues and I was like, you know, the first time we tell a student they can’t do
something, they’re going to say, “Somebody yelled at me and I’ll never walk back in the
library.” So part, you know … that was one challenge.
RC: The money challenge, of course, was … every department, every academic department,
wanted us to subscribe to electronic resources and we couldn’t afford all of them. The
cost of those, of journals, in the sciences, was escalating to an incredible degree. But as
collaborative research became more and more important for many of the science faculty,
many of the faculty in general but certainly the science faculty, as we were trying to build
the STEM areas on the campus, again the pressure over money and how to allocate the
funds that we had was a really tough one because we were constantly making choices.
LG: Um, whom did you do battle with over this money?
RC: Well, I mean my first line of defense, obviously, was the person I reported to, and that was
whoever was the VPAA, because that was my reporting line. For a while I reported to
Sarah Goodwin, who was the Associate Dean, which was really kind of lovely in its own
way. But really my report was to the VPAA. So part of it was that, part of it was Mike
West. I mean, Mike West and I worked — who was the Vice President for Financial
Affairs — umm, we worked very, very closely together, and he held the purse strings. So
when I wanted to completely re-carpet the library in 2011, he was the person I had to go
and plead with. You know, he was the one who oversaw the renovation plans, et cetera.
And it was a little whimsical, as some things at Skidmore were. I mean you never knew.
You know there was … I also was collecting for the Special Collections and there was a
very expensive book I wanted, and the old person in Finance, Mike Hall, you know, was
a really good friend and colleague and one day he said,“What was it you wanted to buy?”
And I said it was this illustrated Barry Moser Bible for a thousand dollars, and he said,
“Do it.” You know, so you never knew, honestly. But what I knew was important was to
have a congenial relationship with people in the administration.
LG: And, um, who was the President, who in the administration, aside from Mike Hall and
company, did you have a lot of dealings with?
RC: Well, Beau, Susan Kress, …
LG: Beau?
RC: Beau … umm, ahh, [laughs] I was going to say Bridges and that’s the wrong name!
LG: [laughs]
RC: [laughs] If only! Oh … what is his name? Oh boy. This is what happens when it’s the
retiree interviews.
LG: Yeah.

�RC: Umm, Susan Kress, … I mean I started out under Phyllis.
LG: Phyllis Roth?
RC: Phyllis Roth.
LG: Who was then?
RC: Um, VPAA, right? Or … or Dean of the Faculty?
LG: She was a Dean of the Faculty and then briefly, wasn’t she the, a President?
RC: She was. So there was also … Chuck Joseph, right?
LG: Yeah.
RC: Umm. Beau Breslin. [laughs]. Um, so you know, those were my immediate report … I had
a very good relationship with both David Porter, obviously, whose a book lover, so David
and I had many a long conversation, and Helen worked in the archives …
LG: Helen?
RC: Helen Porter, David’s wife. We actually gave her a study carrell, finally, because she was
up there so much, and was working on a project for the archives. Um, Phil Glotzbach and
I got along incredibly well — he was very, very supportive of the library. He was a real
library booster. I mean all of, these are, these were scholarly Presidents, in a lot of ways. I
missed out on Palamountain. I didn’t work under Palamountain. So, um … I mean people
love the library, and I think the fact that I was willing to embrace the IT Department
meant a great deal. I wasn’t, like, being standoffish. I really could look at the future and
say “this is of critical importance.” You know some colleges have just shut their libraries
and they just don’t care about the … the print material. And it’s expensive to maintain,
it’s expensive to staff, and in some places, especially where technology is the primary
focus, it’s like, “we’re just doing online material.” They, you know, have Help Desks, per
se, but they’re not maintaining collections.
LG: So what was your fondest memory?
RC: Ok my fondest memory was, I negotiated to get the chamber players to perform in the
library, the Carnegie … um, what was the … Weill? Carnegie Weill, that’s what it used
to be called. I don’t know what it is anymore. And so …
LG: I think it might be Ensemble Connect, now.
RC: Could be.

�LG: In its current iteration.
RC: Yeah. I loved it, when we first …
LG: These were the students who would come for a residency, right?
RC: Exactly, yeah. They would come for a performance, most of them had graduated, they all
had graduated from conservatories, and they were working, many of them, within the
public school system in New York, and they did amazing performances together. And as
a sort of preview to their major concert on campus, they would come to the library and
perform. When we first moved into the building, when I first took over as the Interim
Director, I, my dream was to have tea and music late one afternoon every week, like
Friday afternoons when the library wasn’t crowded and it wouldn’t disturb any students
who were studying. So I was, I really desperately wanted to bring things that felt
cultured, to me, but also really fun. I loved music just kind of drifting, never for long and
never in a disruptive way. For a very brief moment we did some faculty talks at noon,
where faculty would come and talk about their collections.
LG: Do you remember any in particular?
RC: I remember Mehmet Odekon coming and talking about his marble collection.
LG: Mehmet was in the Economics Department.
RC: Yeah, yeah. It was just, I just wanted a little bit of life and vivacity at the same time as I
wanted it to all feel like it was grounded in something academic. I mean, that, you know,
that’s a battle long lost, but, those, I have very wonderful memories of that.
LG: Any others besides Mehmet that you remember?
RC: Uh, I’m really struggling here because, you know, I’m a few years out from my retirement,
and also, having physically removed myself from Saratoga, they are not faculty that I
bump into very often, so… um, I … I don’t.
LG: So probably the IT, um, presence in the library might have been one of the biggest?
RC: I think embracing technology …
LG: Altogether?
RC: Altogether, became really, you know, negotiating with faculty for a long time. For example,
the entire CD collection was behind the Circulation Desk because the Music Department
thought that if we put it out in public that the students would all steal the CDs. Um, and
finally I went to the Music Department and said, “We will replace any CD that is stolen. I
promise you. We will replace them. So have no fear. Students don’t want them, they
download music. Even if they take them out they’re going to download it. They don’t

�want to own CDs.” But, I took John Cosgrove, who was my Public Service librarian, and
a six foot tall Irishman, with me, so when they decided to beat me up I had some
protection. [laughs] And they were not happy. There was no question they weren’t happy.
And finally I just said, “Look, we’re going to do it. We’ll try it for a year and we’ll
reevaluate.” And of course nothing was stolen! But that sense of possessiveness of the
object, just like possessiveness of books and texts. And it’s true that students are happy to
read books, but they don’t want to read them for their courses. They’re happy to read
fiction — a lot of them said they prefer to read an actual book rather than on the Kindle
or whatever. At least that was true when I was there, though it may not be true anymore.
But I do think that embracing technology and also understanding that the library had
many functions, not just one, became very important. Yeah.
LG: So it was a meeting place for faculty.
RC: Yeah.
LG: It was a meeting place for students.
RC: Yeah.
LG: It was a place where they could go for technology.
RC: Yeah.
LG: What am I missing?
RC: Help with research. Access to materials.
LG: So, what kinds of changes in the backgrounds of the librarians, um, did you see in the
course of your career?
RC: Well, it wasn’t so much the background of librarians but we hired a head librarian who
didn’t have a library degree. The woman who replaced me does not have a library degree.
LG: And that is?
RC: Um, Marta…
LG: Brunner?
RC: Brunner.
LG: Marta Brunner.
RC: Yeah. And that was controversial when I left. You know there were some people who were

�very reticent to hire someone … um, she had worked in a library, she had a PhD … in
Consciousness or something, from some place in California. Um, I mean I never worked
with her. We have a very cordial relationship, but I, um, I knew when I left, there were
changes that were needed in the library. There always are changes that are needed in a
library. But I also felt like I was done. That I had done what I set out to do. I left the
library in wonderful shape. I was, you know, really happy about the changes. But I …I
was done. I don’t know what Marta’s done — I’ve never been back to the library.
LG: But it sounds like the nature of what a library is has basically fundamentally changed.
RC: Yeah, yeah! Yeah, from the days when everybody was going around going, “Shhhh,” and,
you know. We had funny pictures of the small room with the typewriters where students
came to type their papers, you know. And then … a flood of computers where students
could come.
LG: And printers?
RC: Well the printers were critical, because they all had computers by then, but they didn’t have
printers. But a lot of them worked better in that kind of an environment and I understand
that, … it kind of forces you to concentrate in a way.
LG: And you don’t have your roommate or folks next door making noise.
RC: Yeah, and some people don’t like working in isolation. They feel lonely and isolated. And
so that’s another thing that the library always provided, I think. And I remembered that
from me. I spent a summer up at University of Vermont taking courses, um, because my
brother was doing his residency there, and um, I didn’t know anybody. I was very lonely,
and I would just go to the library to do my research for the courses, you know, so I never
felt alone. And I wanted our students, especially the students who might have one of
those weekends when they didn’t have a lot to do, to feel like there was a place for them
to come. Movies for them to take out. Whatever. Yeah.
LG: When you first started, were there movies for them to take out?
RC: Always. They were VHS tapes. Yeah. I mean, we had a great film collection. I still miss it.
LG: And when you left, what were those movies on? Not VHS.
RC: No, DVDs. They were on DVDs. I mean we were, we … there were some streaming film
services that we had. The problem is in, I think Marta’s made some hard decisions about
the ones to maintain and the ones that … faculty can rent films for teaching, but they, we
couldn’t give free rein to students. Again, money. Money, money, money. There’s so
much available. I mean I, you know I think there’s almost anything you can get if you are
willing to pay a few dollars and to be honest. Considering that lots of people aren’t
requiring $200 text books any more, I think students can afford. And they can watch
together. One of the things we built into the library was the, into the library renovation,

�was the viewing room. So, you know, twenty people could sit there and watch a film.
Yeah.
LG: So when did you retire?
RC: I retired in 2015.
LG: And as you look back, what are your fondest memories … of the college in general?
RC: What a great community of people it was! I, you know there’s no denying that these were
our friends, these were people that we knew, that we loved, that we … that our children
grew up with. It’s a beautiful campus. Its heart is in the right place, even if it gets some
things wrong. You know, it’s not always easy. Umm, it was a great time, really, to be in
… in higher education. It was a great time to be in librarianship. I mean I bridged a funny
time, but I started out loving books so I felt like my heart was in the right place so I could
talk to a David Porter about his book collection and about rare books, and you know,
lecture students about the history of printing, and, you know, do teaching of that sort, that
felt so important for them to understand, that everything wasn’t just delivered on a
computer. But, ah, you know it was just a really beautiful moment. Not … again, that
there weren’t —- I had just taken over as the permanent Library Director before 9/11. I
mean we lived through hard things that were happening in our country, but, um, it was
still a great time. They were really good years.
LG: So, what have you been doing since you retired?
RC: Besides following my children and grandchildren around the country? Um, I mean, which
keeps us very busy. But, in California I volunteered with an organization called World
Reader, which …
LG: Again, what?
RC: World Reader, which distributes digital texts to countries in Africa and India. They
partnered with Amazon and they sent Kindles and so could therefore download the texts.
So, I did a variety of things but it was really fun for me because it was a small company
full of youngsters. And there was one librarian on staff, and much less seasoned than I
was, and so we did a lot of work in terms of, not actually cataloging but I wrote up a lot
of descriptions of books and did a lot of, sort of busy work previewing things, and it was
really fun for me. That was a great introduction to doing something that felt useful as a
volunteer. Yeah. Also it got me out of the East Bay and into downtown San Francisco,
which was really fun. So. But then my kids started having families and then we moved to
Colorado.
LG: Again to follow family?
RC: Again to follow our girls. Yeah. I mean, we all sat down and had a, decided as a family we

�were going to move together. And just before COVID I went to a lecture up in Special
Collections in the library, in the public library, where …
LG: The main … main library?
RC: The main branch of the Denver Public Library, which is magnificent. It’s a beautiful,
fabulous facility with a stunning collection of books. Um, and John and I were in there all
the time anyway, just taking out books and movies. They had a great foreign film, um,
collection. So I went to a lecture on artists’ books, which I had collected at Skidmore.
That was actually, that was all about my being Director, but I could talk about my role as
creating a collection of artists’ books at Skidmore. But … and at the end of that I went to
the person who is in charge of the Special Collection and told him I would be interested
in volunteering, and he was very excited and interested. So I did volunteer. And I’ve done
a variety of projects. And, at the moment I have a very, very long term project which I’m
loving, which is … they have two distinctive collections. They have many collections,
but one is in a vault and it’s designated as very valuable books — so that’s the Audubon
ele … you know, elephant folios, and … you know, North American Indian collect…,
you know, incunabula. They have just amazing, amazing books. And then there’s a
secondary collection which had been collecting over the years, much of it was gifts. And
so I’m going through that volume by volume and assessing whether it should stay in the
collection or be moved to the valuable collection or just be sent down for sale. And there
are many hundreds of volumes, so I’m about two-thirds of the way through the, um,
through the quarto books, the smaller of the books. And then I’ll move on to the
oversized ones. So, I don’t go in often, but even … the main library is actually closed for
renovation at the moment, and now a part of it is open, just a part of the first floor, but the
Special Collection is up on the fifth floor. So I go up to the fifth floor and work at least
once a week. Mostly once a week. Yeah.
LG: I’d like to go back to something because you really didn’t talk about the artists’, um,
collection.
RC: No I didn’t talk about the Special Collections.
LG: Yes, would you elaborate on that?
RC: Yeah. And the only reason to, or the special reason to do that, I guess, is because when I
started at Skidmore there was no Special Collections Librarian. There was a locked
collection up on what was then the fourth floor, where I had my studio, and then there
was the Steloff Collection, which had its own little room in the library before the
renovation, and eventually they were integrated. But when I got there one of the things
that I began doing was collecting artists’ books. And I managed, while I was there, to get
an endowment of a quarter of a million dollars to maintain … from Sonny Stahl and the,
um … now I’m forgetting the name of the foundation … um, to continue to collect that,
book, and pretty much in those days Peggy …, that endowment did two things. It
endowed my position to get me off of the Reference Desk at night and on weekends, so I
could work a regular week, which allowed me to give access to that collection. Um, and I

�began collecting artists’ books and built a very sizable artist book collection, both from
the endowment and also it was matched in the early years by Peg Seiden, and then I
continued to maintain that. When I left I took the full endowment and allowed that to be
used to purchase books. By then we had a full time Special Collections Assistant, Wendy
Anthony, who had a full time assistant, whose … Jane … whose last name I don’t
remember anymore. So it was a way of bringing classes in to Special Collections to see
this rich material. The artists’ books were used heavily by the Art Department. We had a
small collection of classic texts from David Porter’s personal collection. I don’t know if
they’re still there or not — I presume they are. Um, we had the Phyllis Roth vampire
collection, which she used extensively to teach her, you know her vampire classes. You
know there was a whole, we had, you know, an odd smattering of quite beautiful books.
The Native American Indian book collection, which is worth millions. Um, we had one
early Blake, which Sarah Goodwin would come up and use. Um, you know we really
had, just, it’s kind of a hodge-podge of a collection, but I did my best to kind of enrich
that collection and make it available and try to bring people in. So I would, um, you know
the Celebration Weekend, I would do little, you know they had those presentations — I
would do presentations up in Special Collections of some of the materials that we had.
And brought classes in to do a little bit on the history of books, the history of printing, et
cetera. I was very … I was very proud of that work. That was … I mean those are some
of my really good memories. The teaching that I got to do, building that collection, um,
which was a kind of counterbalance to IT in my life, because so much of my attention
and my money was put into technology and into the library’s web page and into making
really hard decisions about what we were purchasing, um, et cetera. So, having this
precious collection of wonderful material that I could show students and let them
understand that, this is the book that Shakespeare read that influenced the writing of
Macbeth. I mean, that was pretty special.
LG: Yup!
RC: Yeah.
LG: Anything else we should, um, include?
RC: I mean not that I can think of. I’m glad we thought about the Special Collection thing
because that was really important to me. No, I mean there was … a lot of changing in the
staffing and that was inevitable, and … I, you know I feel like it’s a great library!
LG: It sounds like there was an increasing participation of the faculty and their stu… and their
classes in the course of your time.
RC: Yeah. Well for one thing, students, you know in the old days you’d say to a student, you
know, I want a bibliography. Go to the catalog and find five books and three articles, or,
if you were lucky enough to find them in the library. But we certainly always had
interlibrary loan, but, as I say the vast availability of material and the ability to
discriminate what is important and useful became something that was very, very
important. And then also I think Special Collections got used more and more because,

�you know, it was very good for students to understand a little bit about the history of
information and the dissemination of information.
LG: When students first come on campus as first year students, um, there was an orientation in
the library, was there not?
RC: Not any more. Not for a very long time. Because they felt so much pressure, on the one
hand, and also felt that, um, students during that orientation absorbed very little because
they are so worried about who’s going to be their friend and who they’re going to sit with
at dinner, et cetera, and, you know, as I saw … we did, for years we did it. I don’t think
… maybe they’re doing it again, I don’t know, but we used to develop these little hunts
through the library and little … but it was never required so sometimes they would come,
sometimes they wouldn’t. Um, you know, and sometimes … I think we rely more and
more on faculty bringing their classes in. And sometimes we sort of babysit the classes
when the faculty have to go away and give papers, and it’s not our favorite way to do it
but we’ll take ’em when we can get ’em. And then they all have peer mentors and
sometimes the peer mentors, we would try to get the peer mentors to bring their groups of
students in and have little projects for them to do. But I’m, again, I’m … seven years …
eight years out from what’s going on now, so … . But we did our best, honestly, to train,
to teach, to be part of the teaching mission and to give students access but also the ability
to find the best material they could.
LG: This has been fascinating for me to hear, you know, what has happened in the library over
those many years, and the changes, even in the physical structure. Did you have any role
with, I suppose, the architects who were planning how the building would look, you
know? Do you remember?
RC: I, you know, in the first round when Peggy was the Director and I was the Humanities
Librarian, when we did the initial renovation, the big one, not the IT integration one, um,
I had a lot of input into the Special Collections area because we were going to have the
Pohndorff Room and then we were going to have an area behind that that was a work
room that became my bindery and my book repair place. And for a long, for the first few
years, I trained students to do book repairs with me up there, to make boxes, um, more
than anything else. So I always had students up in Special Collections working with me.
But I, and then eventually I got a part time assistant to keep the Pohndorff Room open
because I was working as the Humanities Librarian and I wasn’t up there, I was
downstairs. … That’s not true, I was up there one year during the interim year. So I did
have input into that, with those architects. In the second round when we were integrating
IT and renovating the library, yes, I worked really closely with the architects. Just …
LG: And what kind of changes had to happen?
RC: Well we needed to completely redo the lower level of the library to kind of dig out a big
space for IT, and then we needed to redo the first floor of the library so that we could fit
the Help Desk and other IT offices. And then there were some smaller renovations, and

�then, truthfully, we needed to re-carpet. We shifted the entire collection; the entire library
collection of hundreds of thousands of books, had to be shifted.
LG: Did you run into some geology kinds of problems?
RC: Um, in terms of weight and … or in terms of …?
LG: Well I’m thinking, you know, when IT moved into that basement space,
RC: Yeah.
LG: Were there any issues about the ground, or?
RC: No, I… no, I mean they had to blast. Everything’s built on stone, of course, but there was
no water that we knew of, and that would have been really critical, that would have been
a problem.
LG: Because there was a lot of underground water in the area.
RC: Of course, of course. No. No. The bigger problem was that the fourth floor, which we
eventually put stack areas on, was not built for the weight and so I think that was one of
the things that was taken into consideration during the first renovation, not the second
one. The second one was modest by comparison because the building wasn’t gutted, but
it was refreshed and changed enough to integrate this Department in such a way that it
felt like the building belonged to them too. Like we weren’t going to just stick them off in
the middle of nowhere, which is what some of the staff wanted. I think they really felt it
was compromising the integrity of our staff to have another staff in that building. But
sometimes it’s hard to share. But that was fine — I did all of that hard work and then I
left, so it could all be blamed on me! [laughs]
LG: Ruth thank you very much.
RC: Yeah, it’s been a delight!
LG: This has been a delight to hear.
RC: Great!
LG: And very, um, enlightening for me.
RC: Great!
LG: So thank you.
RC: Yeah, you’re welcome. Thanks for coming and talking to me.

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                    <text>Interview with Roy Rotheim by Lynne Gelber &amp; Susan Bender (recording tech),
Skidmore College Retiree Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York,
February 26, 2026
Lynne Gelber:
This is Lynne Gelber. I'm here with Susan Bender to interview Roy Rotheim. It is the 26th of
February 2026.
Lynne Gelber:
And I'd like to begin, Roy, by asking you where you were born, where you grew up, what
brought you to Skidmore.
Roy Rotheim:
Well, okay, like everyone else I thought, I was born in Brooklyn. Lived there for three years. My
father was a dentist. He came back from the war, had no patients, so he went to the baseball
game and got tired of that. So took advantage of the GI bill and bought a house in Levittown,
Long Island. Hicksville, actually, and opened up shop. So, at the age of three, I grew up in
Hicksville, Long Island. Lived there until I was 17 when I went off to college. Told my parents
to change the locks, I wasn't coming back. Went off to college, went to graduate school.
Lynne Gelber:
What did you major in in college?
Roy Rotheim:
Well, I was a zoology major. And I had to take a social science, none of which sounded
interesting to me. One sounded worse than the next. It's a true story. I was in the library the day
before registration and there was this really cute girl sitting across from me and she was filling
out here registration form and she wrote down, "Economics. Tuesday, Thursday, 3:00."
So, I wrote down, "Economics. Tuesday, Thursday, 3:00." Never saw her again. She probably
saw me do it.
But I walked in and it was like ... remember that movie, what was it? Jerry Maguire? You know,
“You had me at hello”. I walked in there and I said, "Oh my God." And I switched from zoology
to economics and been doing it ever since.
Went right on to graduate school.
Lynne Gelber:
Where?
Roy Rotheim:
Rutgers. Got my doctorate. At 25 I was professor at Bowling Green State University for two
years. That was loathsome. You could still sell autographed copies of the Bible, so you knew it
wasn't a good place to live.

Page 1 of 18

�I get a phone call from one of my professors saying, "Hey, I just got a call from a friend at
Harvard and they're looking for somebody to teach radical economics at Franklin and Marshall
and so I gave them your name." So, I get a call from Franklin and Marshall, and they hired me
and I taught there for four years. I wasn't very happy with it so I got out of academia and I
became a magazine editor.
Challenge Magazine ... It is to economics what Psychology Today is to psychology. I lived in
White Plains, did that for a year. Hated that even worse than academia, and so I said, "I better go
back to academia." I applied for a number of jobs and got offers at Khan College, this place, and
University of Maine. We just fell in love with Saratoga. Never looked back. I've been here since
1980.
Lynne Gelber:
So, since 1980, what have you been teaching? What were you teaching, and ...
Roy Rotheim:
My primary fields are Monetary Economics and the History of Economic Thought. That's
basically what I've been teaching.
I got in early. I was on a lot of committees within my first two years. I don't know how I kept
getting elected to committees. I was on a Curriculum Committee, I was on CEPP, I was on
CAFR, all within three years.
I was heavily involved with the liberal studies program at the onset.
Lynne Gelber:
I want to back up. You got called by Skidmore and then were you interviewed?
Roy Rotheim:
I came up here, had an interview and then got an offer.
Lynne Gelber:
With?
Roy Rotheim:
A guy named Ted Reagan.
Lynne Gelber:
Ah, yeah.
Roy Rotheim:
I don't know, you may have known Ted. Just the most… Matter of fact, he was one of the
reasons I came here. He was just such a mensch and I really, really liked him. So, I got a job
offer and came in September. He resigned and Eric Weller called me into his office and he says,
"Okay. Make me an Economics Department."
I said, "What do you mean?"

Page 2 of 18

�He said, "I want you to be the chair."
I said, "Well, uh, I'm the youngest person in the department, I'm not even in the Economics
Department building because I'm over in a music studio in Filene. I don't know anybody in the
department." Go over there and ... that's how it all began.
I was chair of economics on and off for 25 years. Except for about five when I chaired the
Business Department. So, I was in administration a lot.
Lynne Gelber:
Was that an attempt to do something to the Business Department? To upgrade it or ...
Roy Rotheim:
Oh, the Business Department? Yeah, yes. [Where are your words, Roy?]
When I got there, it still was the “department of secretarial studies and counter dusting”. In fact,
one of the Economics Department's alums is Arturo Peralta Ramos III. Arturo was an econ
major, and he and I became very close. The reason why he became an economics major, he
wanted to be a business major, but they would not waive the typing requirement. That's where
the business department was.
Then they brought on someone named Jim Biteman and Colleen Burke, and they introduced
what is now Wmby 107 and also strategy. But still, most of the department were a lot of MBAs
who were mostly practitioners, and were not academics. I think the department ... As Skidmore
got better and better and better even, business did not.
Lynne Gelber:
So, what did Eric want you to do when you took over?
Roy Rotheim:
Well, no. Oh, no, no. Eric wanted me to ... Well, the Economics Department only had like three
or four people and he wanted me to turn it into a real department. So, that was my job there. For
better or for worse.
The Business Department was different. I really had to be, Tim Harper calls it, a "Change agent,"
which means you come in, you completely turn it upside down and you run as quickly as
possible before they can catch you.
Lynne Gelber:
And were there people who really helped in the administration?
Roy Rotheim:
Phyllis. Phyllis was incredible.
Susan Bender:
Phyllis?
Roy Rotheim:

Page 3 of 18

�Phyllis Roth. She was the one ... see I lived next door to Phyllis. Phyllis said, "Come on over,
let's have coffee." I didn't know what she wanted. She starts bitching and moaning ... can I say,
"bitching?" Bitching and moaning about the Business Department, "My God, it's terrible! And
it's an embarrassment. What are we going to do?" I don't know where she was going with that. I
thought maybe she was going to actually ask me if she could appoint Sandy Baum to be chair
and what was my opinion.
After about 45 minutes of a lot of talking on her part she said, "So, will you go chair it?"
I said, "I never took a business course. I never owned a business. I didn't have a lemonade stand,
or a paper route."
She said, "No. We need an administrator."
It wasn't an easy job because I had a ... I walked into the office and had to start letting people go.
We euphonimize, we don't let them go. I had to hire real academics, which is what Phyllis
wanted. Problem is, that's going to be the highest paying job on campus and they weren't used to
that. She wouldn't pay it.
I said, "Well, look. Think about this, someone has her daughter walking through the English
department and the tour guide says, 'This is our English department. It's one of the preeminent
English departments of small colleges in the country. Okay, now let's keep walking. Oh, here's
the Business Department. Oh, this is a real embarrassment, I'm sorry.'.
I said, "Phyllis, if you want the Business Department to be at the same level as the English
Department, you're going to have to pay for it."
It was really funny because I walked out my back door, and her back screen door used to creak,
and I heard the creak. All I saw was the head go out and she said, "Okay!"
Then I went on a buying spree. I mean, I hired Mark Youndt, Ela Lepkowska-White, Pushi
Prasad, Tim Harper. It was fantastic. Then I ran, I just ran away as quickly as possible to get
back to the Econ Department.
Lynne Gelber:
So how long were you doing that?
Roy Rotheim:
Five years. I was at ... you were Associate Dean when I was there.
Susan Bender:
I was, yes.
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah.
Lynne Gelber:
So, you keep pointing to Susan.
Roy Rotheim:

Page 4 of 18

�That one. Yeah.
It was interesting because to this day I don't understand what that means to be a business
department.
Lynne Gelber:
So, when you went back to the Economics Department, what was your role and ...
Roy Rotheim:
I went back to be chair again. Yeah.
Lynne Gelber:
And were you also teaching?
Roy Rotheim:
Oh, yeah. Well, yes, although by that time I was teaching, was it still LS1 or maybe it was
Human Dilemmas by then?
Susan Bender:
Liberal studies.
Roy Rotheim:
I was still teaching that andLynne Gelber:
So that was Liberal Studies 1?
Roy Rotheim:
That's right. Then, talk about chutzpah, I actually taught a course in the Business Department,
knowing nothing about business, where I helped students learn how to be small business
consultants.
So, because I was chair of the Econ Department, I had a two-course reduction, and because I was
teaching LS1 and the course in the business department, I only taught one econ course.
Lynne Gelber:
Which was?
Roy Rotheim:
Oh, God knows. Whatever I taught, History of Economic Thought, Monetary Economics, Intro
to Economics.
Lynne Gelber:
Okay.

Page 5 of 18

�Roy Rotheim:
Yeah. Pretty much. By that time the department was up to 10. We really expanded.
Lynne Gelber:
And what year was that?
Roy Rotheim:
'93. That's when I came back to the department. I was there from '88-'89 to '93.
Susan Bender:
Roy, can you talk a little bit about your engagement in Liberal Studies curriculum?
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah. We got this big ... Was it a Mellon grant? I forget, it was in the early '80s. I was on CEPP
and Eric WellerSusan Bender:
CEPP being?
Roy Rotheim:
The Committee on Educational Policies and Planning, which I chaired and got rid of the Liberal
Studies program.
We had to come up with something. We really didn't know what to do. I remember Eric was on
the committee, Tom Lewis was on the committee, Mott Green. I don't know if that name rings a
bell. He got a MacArthur scholarship. Okay?
I remember Tom Lewis made a big presentation he wanted the entire LS1 course to just be
Homer's Odyssey. He made a great presentation, but he wasn't persuasive.
They didn't know what to do, so Eric came up with a committee of maybe 15 people. I can
remember meeting over in Palamountain and we couldn't agree on anything. That was broken
down into three groups of five and each of us had to bang heads and they couldn't come up with
anything. That eventually whittled down to a group of three. A guy named Evan Rivers who
wasn't around very long in the English department, Ron Fiskus, and me.
I spent the entire economics’ entertainment budget at Gaffney's. We drank beer and wrote the
LS1 curriculum. Then we came back and had to present it. It was Jeff Seagrave, Sheldon
(Solomon), Phil Boschoff, old names that ... Kate Berheide. It was a great group. It was really
fun.
So, we came up with that, and then, of course, we had LS2, LS3, LS4.
Lynne Gelber:
Could you talk a little bit about the concept behind the Liberal Studies 1 curriculum? What the
overview for the course was? What you were trying to accomplish with it?
Roy Rotheim:

Page 6 of 18

�Yes. It was an idea that there needed to be a foundational course that every first-term student
took that would then infuse the entire curriculum over the full length of the curriculum. No
matter how disciplinary any course was, they always had to have in the back of their minds that
there was this interdisciplinary component that they should bring in as often as possible. That
was quintessentially a liberal arts.
Lynne Gelber:
So, was this organized around a presentation by some professor to the whole group and then
broken down into individual discussion groups?
Roy Rotheim:
The way it worked ... First of all, we had a text that was this big. You can't see this on tape, it
was about eight inches. It was a loose-leaf. Every student had to buy it, I guess. Then we would
meet twice a week in Gannett for lectures and then twice a week in our small groups of about 20
students. It was a dog and pony show. You gaveLynne Gelber:
Which involved a lot of the faculty.
Roy Rotheim:
I'm sorry. It may have been three times a week, I think, we met in big groups.
Lynne Gelber:
I think it wasRoy Rotheim:
Was it two?
Lynne Gelber:
Yes. I was involved in it
Roy Rotheim:
It was a four-credit course. It was great. Well, for me, it was great because I got to hang out with
people I normally wouldn't get to hang out with. At the same time, the level of embarrassment
that all of us had when none of us could understand anything that anybody else asked us to read.
I can remember we had to read something by Aristotle, and Darnell Rucker in the Philosophy
Department suggested it, and it was like reading Greek to me. I read it and read it. I knew every
word, but no two consecutively made any sense to me. I struggled and struggled and struggled
and finally came in and said, "Darnell, I got it," and I told him what I thought it was, and he said,
"No, that's not it."
So, that's the way it went. Sheldon would always give the first lecture.
Susan Bender:

Page 7 of 18

�Sheldon Solomon.
Roy Rotheim:
Sheldon Solomon would give the first lecture and I loved it. Not for the reason you might think.
Lynne Gelber:
As did the students.
Roy Rotheim:
Well, that was the issue. It’s that he would come in and, of course, say, "Fuck" a lot and they
would all love that and say, "Lower than whale shit." He had a whole ... What they didn't know
was he had a script because I heard him give it over the years and I could take notes and they
were exactly the same.
They would come in after that lecture and they'd go, "Wow! That was the best thing we ever
heard. I can't believe it!"
And I would say, "What did he say?" And they had no idea.
I said, "Okay, welcome to college." I said, "This is not Entertainment 101. You don't sit back and
put your arms up and get entertained. Did you take any notes?"
"No."
I said, "Well, all that's going to change." I said, "From now on, you come to work and you sit
there and you get ..."
I made every one of them buy a sketchbook. A hard-bound sketchbook, unlined, where they
would take notes. We would come into class, and it was all because of Sheldon. Because he
entertained them so much. The biggest problem with it was, is that, particularly younger faculty,
were intimidated by it.
They said, "We're out of our league. We can't do this. We know what we know. We've just come
out of graduate school, but we can't do all this other stuff." So, it became a problem.
Lynne Gelber:
Were there other significant curricular or other initiatives that you had experienced while you
were still teaching?
Roy Rotheim:
Well, significant curricular experiences?
Lynne Gelber:
Yes.
Roy Rotheim:
Well, we had LS2, 3, and 4, when I chaired CEPP and which, I'm afraid, we got rid of. Just
because we couldn't afford it. We couldn't staff it. We couldn't afford it. It was really a matter of
affordability.

Page 8 of 18

�Lynne Gelber:
Are there changes at Skidmore that you experienced in the course of your career?
Roy Rotheim:
What? Curricularly?
Lynne Gelber:
Not necessarily curricular, but changes in the campus or anything thatRoy Rotheim:
Sure, of course. Physical structure?
Lynne Gelber:
Could be.
Roy Rotheim:
I was on some committee. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh! They were going to get a grant from, I forget
which major foundation, to build two buildings. One behind the other. They were going to be
academic buildings. It was going to be between Palamountain and Howe-Rounds. So, they got
together a committee of all the departments whom they were going to move into that building.
Psychology, History, it used to be, Chuck used to call it the Department of so-and-so Sociology,
Social Work, and Anthropology. What'd I leave out? History, American studies?
Susan Bender:
Right.
Roy Rotheim:
Okay. And Economics for some reason. So, we met. We never got the grant. There was one
building that we were going to design. That was amazing because we had a deal with an
unnamed business manager who came in and announced that, "Well, we're going to have to
violate some fire rules." And you should have seen Dave Burrow's face. We walked out, I mean,
we walked out, you know. So, they had to renege on that.
They said, "Okay. To save on money we're going to have to build offices that are 125 square
feet."
I said, "You can't have an office that's 125 square feet. You won't fit in a desk and a file cabinet
and chairs."
So, what we did was, is that we found a space that was 125 square feet and sure enough, we
couldn't fit in anything, so they increased it to 144.
I remember they spent a lot of time talking about the HVAC system. I remember going back to
the Econ Department and they said, "Well, can we open the windows?"
I said, "No, you can just close them."

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�But here was the best part ... Oh! Then the architects wanted the building to go right up to the
walkway to made a quad. And we said, "What's going to happen to those trees?" You know the
trees.
They said, "Oh, we'll tear them down."
We said, "Over our dead bodies." And, so we made them recede the building. It was like taking
away their first-born child.
Then we said, "Okay, and the building's going to have a pitched roof."
They said, "None of the other buildings have pitched roofs."
I said, "Well, that's why you spend so much money on snow removal." So, we did that.
But this was the best part, it’s that we spent all of our time designing this building and talking
about the details, but then it came time for the final meeting with the architects. Who showed up
but Joe Palamountain.
He looked at us and he said, "Shut up." And he sat down and he rolled up his sleeves and he
negotiated with those architects. We just sat and watched and that's how he got the building.
Susan Bender:
This was Tisch, right?
Roy Rotheim:
This is now Tisch, yes. Oh, oh and then there was another building, which Tom Lewis and I
designed on the other side of Bolton. Which they didn't know what to call it so they called it
convertible classroom building, CCB.
What they were going to do is that they were going to have offices on the second floor,
mathematics and eventually economics. Eric allowed us to move in there. On the first floor there
were going to be freshman. The freshman trashed that building. Thousands and thousands of
dollars, do you remember that, of damages?
Lynne Gelber:
Yeah, it was dormitory space, in other words.
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah, of damages. So eventually they put the computer center down there. Then, I guess, Bill
Harder came up with money, somebody got money from him, so it became Harder Hall.
Now, it was only supposed to be there for a couple of years, which was what, '25?
Susan Bender:
[inaudible 00:24:04].
Roy Rotheim:
So, they just tore it down. That's physical.
Academically? It's hard to say. The quality of the education has changed significantly.

Page 10 of 18

�Lynne Gelber:
And the composition of the undergraduate population.
Roy Rotheim:
People ask me that. They must ask you that so often. I say, "I don't know, they're the same." I
had Matt, her son.
Lynne Gelber:
Who was an economics major.
Roy Rotheim:
And Rich Harwood. I had really good students then, and I have really good students now.
So, in terms of that, no. The only difference, and I think it made such an important difference, is
that we got more and more of an international student base. I can remember when I was doing, I
guess by that time it was Human Dilemmas, I had a number of African students in the class. I
can remember one of them, but there was more than one, just letting some of the traditional
students have it about what's going on in the world. One student I remember from Mozambique
stood up and gave this lecture to these students on what happened in Rwanda. So, they opened
up the world to our students.
If I had to say what was the most important change, I would say it was that one. Just the
internationalization, is that a word?
Lynne Gelber:
We had a significant number of students from China.
Roy Rotheim:
Students from China, when I had to go explain you don't eat pizza with chopsticks, I had
wonderful students from China. I had wonderful students from China. Yeah. Because I would
have them when they were freshman mostly in Intro to Economics and they were not used to the
American system. Particularly, a Skidmore liberal arts [inaudible 00:26:33].
Yeah. They were fantastic. All of the international students, they just changed the ... I don't know
whether you experienced that also, but I did to a tremendous extent. A lot of them wanted to
major in economics.
Lynne Gelber:
Give the time frame for that influx. Do you have a sense of when that is? Of international
students.
Roy Rotheim:
'90s? I would say in the '90s, yeah. '90s, late '90s.
Lynne Gelber:
Yeah, late '90s.

Page 11 of 18

�Roy Rotheim:
Late '90s, yeah, I don't remember exactly. That was the most significant change, and for the
better.
Lynne Gelber:
Roy, tell me what year you retired and what you've been doing since you retired.
Roy Rotheim:
Well, I retired in June of '22, but something I didn't tell you, I taught in the Honors Forum for a
very long time. There was this program here called College Upside Down. Did you know about
that? No? Okay. I had nothing to do with it. Where it was student influenced to a great extent. It
was a whole curriculum.
Lynne Gelber:
What faculty. Excuse me.
Roy Rotheim:
I have no idea.
Lynne Gelber:
Oh.
Roy Rotheim:
It was before me. I have no idea. But it was a '70s thing. '60s, '70s thing. I have no idea.
But one of the courses, which was called Citizen Studentship HF203, Honors Forum 203, that
was on the books. It was taught by somebody, who I think was in the English department, but he
didn't get tenure. Then it was taken over by somebody in the government ... The purpose of the
course was really interesting. It was Aristotelian in the sense that the community is prior to the
individual and the individual means nothing independent of the community.
Basically, the students had to learn how to educate each other. They therefore felt citizenship in
the educational process. It was passed onto somebody in the government department who was a
bit of an autocrat and so didn't understand the concept of participatory democracy. I used to do a
course like that back in the '70s in one of my first jobs. I was actually mentoring this autocratic
professor.
He said, "I can't do it anymore," he said, "would you do it?"
I said, "Sure." So, I did that for 25 years or something.
Lynne Gelber:
And again, the name of this program was?
Roy Rotheim:
Well, the Honors Forum, but it was Citizen Studentship, which even the directors called "Student
Citizenship."

Page 12 of 18

�I said, "No, that's Knitting for the Needy. It's Citizen Studentship, you're a citizen first."
Even though I retired in June of '22, I continued to teach it every fall. That one course. I did that
for a couple of years and I think this is the first year I didn't do it.
So, what have I been doing? I still do my research. Still do my writing.
Lynne Gelber:
You research in what field?
Roy Rotheim:
Actually, in two fields. In monetary economics but also in economic philosophy. I'm part of a
group at Cambridge University called the Cambridge Social Ontology Group. They actually
meet at 10:00 AM on Tuesday mornings. 10:00 AM Greenwich Mean Time.
Lynne Gelber:
Greenwich Mean Time.
Roy Rotheim:
Which means I'm there at 5:00 on Tuesday mornings. I go to the gym and I have six
grandchildren who all live in Saratoga. I have been a part of raising them. And traveling, the
usual.
So, I've had very little to do with Skidmore.
Lynne Gelber:
Anything else that we missed that we should include?
Roy Rotheim:
God, I don't know.
See, I taught at Franklin and Marshall before I came to Skidmore. I took a year off because, I
just, academia ... I said, "This is not for me." It was uptight, it was pretentious. I said, "This is not
me. I'm from Levittown."
But I came here and the atmosphere, the culture, the environment was just so comfortable. I felt
like one could learn comfortably here without all of the pretense and without all of the pressure.
That's why I stayed.
Lynne Gelber:
And yet, you have experienced a lot of challenges along the way.
Roy Rotheim:
Most of which I can't share with you, yes.
Lynne Gelber:
Okay. Anything else we should add?

Page 13 of 18

�Roy Rotheim:
You know, I can't think of anything.
I've worked with some fascinating people. Oh! I was involved in ... there used to be, do they still
have it? Writing Across the Curriculum? English department invited me, because I was a
magazine editor, invited me to be a part of that, which I enjoyed.
Lynne Gelber:
Do you know who started that?
Susan Bender:
Phil Boschoff.
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah, prob- no. I think it was Ralph Ciancio. Pretty sure it was Ralph. Yeah, Phil had something
to do with that.
Susan Bender:
Phil Boschoff?
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah, but I think it was Ralph who spearheaded that. I'm pretty sure it was Ralph.
I chaired all the major committees exceptLynne Gelber:
Major committee like CEPP?
Roy Rotheim:
Oh, CEPP.
Susan Bender:
CAFR?
Roy Rotheim:
CAFR.
Lynne Gelber:
That's the Committee on Academic Freedom and Rights?
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah. I did that one. We met one year 72 times. Oh, God! I felt like I wanted to go back to law
school after that.

Page 14 of 18

�I was on CEPP a couple of times and I was elected and before I got onto the committee, they
made me chair for the following year because they knew they were going to have to revise the
curriculum.
John Ramsey said, "You're the biggest wise-ass we know and therefore you'll be able to stand in
front of the faculty and push this thing through."
So, we actually changed significantly the liberal studies program. We changed it significantly.
Really cut it down.
Lynne Gelber:
And CAPT?
Roy Rotheim:
No. Gail said she'd divorce me if I ever was on CAPT.
Susan Bender:
That's the ...
Lynne Gelber:
Committee on Academic, Promotions &amp; Tenure.
Roy Rotheim:
Academic whatever they call themselves.
Lynne Gelber:
Promotions and Tenure. CAPT.
Susan Bender:
Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure.
Roy Rotheim:
But yeah, I was on CAPT with you two times, but we never met. So, I always told people, "If I'm
on CAPT review, you'll be fine because we'll never meet."
I chaired the ... I remember. There used to be something on business, the budget ... I forget the
name of it, but we met with David Porter and Carl Broekhuizen.
Lynne Gelber:
Oh, was it Budget Committee?
Roy Rotheim:
Something like that because I remember they were dealing with revenue issues. What was the
guy's name who was the director of admissions? Kent something?
Lynne Gelber:

Page 15 of 18

�I can almost picture him.
Roy Rotheim:
Yes, very thin, or thin. Anyway, I said to David Porter, "Just raise tuition."
Lynne Gelber:
Kent Jones?
Roy Rotheim:
Kent Jones.
And I said to David Porter, "Raise tuition."
He said, "We can't do that! We'll lose students!"
I said, "No, you don't understand. Yes, you will. But you don't understand. Skidmore is probably
one of the top second-choice schools in the North East.
And if you ask students, 'Where'd you apply?'.
'Well, I applied to Colgate.'
'Did you get in?'.
'No, so I came to Skidmore.'"
I said, "So, what that means is that you have a corner on the market, which means if you raise
your tuition, yeah you're going to lose some students, but not by as great an amount as you'd be
able to raise tuition." I said, "It's called elasticity of demand."
And Kent, I had to do it with a rubber band to explain to him how to do it, and I think they did
raise tuition.
Oh, and then I said, "Then take the money, the extra money you get, and subsidize low-income
students. So, you'll actually change the composition of the student body." They did, they got the
extra money and then they bought a bunch of computers!
Working with the different presidents was ...
Lynne Gelber:
So which presidents did you work with?
Roy Rotheim:
PorterLynne Gelber:
When you started with Palamountain.
Roy Rotheim:
I'm sorry, Palamountain. Then David Porter, I still remember when he first came. We had an
academic staff meeting at a place called, was it Dippikill? Somewhere up, not too far. His first

Page 16 of 18

�wife, who was also named Helen, had just died. I remember taking a walk in the woods with
him. An amazing person. You know. He was amazing person. A polymath, a mensch.
Then I remember Jaime Studley. It's funny because I remember making an appointment with her
and I brought a pot of tea and a couple of cups and I sat down and I said, "Jaime, stop fighting
the faculty. That's what you're doing!" I said, "They love to talk," I said, "Just rope-a-dope them.
Let them talk themselves out. Don't fight back."
I can remember Phil. Phil was interesting to work with.
Lynne Gelber:
Glotzbach.
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah, he took a more corporate perspective, I think. It was at least my understanding, on how to
run ... and I'm not criticizing that, to any extent. I think he had a big responsibility. There was a
lot of building going on and there were financial issues and fundraising. And yeah, he did it.
Then there was Marc.
Lynne Gelber:
Marc?
Roy Rotheim:
Marc Conner came in just as I was leaving, and I just was in awe of him. Just in awe of him. We
got to know each other really well in a very short time.
Worked with a lot of Deans.
Lynne Gelber:
For example?
Roy Rotheim:
Including her. Deans of Faculty? Well, there was Eric Weller. There was Dave Burrows, there
was Phyllis of course, Phyllis Roth.
Oh, there was a woman, what was her name? She was a scientist. She was the only numerate
dean we ever had. She was a scientist, she was from NSF or something like that. You remember
her name? Yeah. Yeah. She was numerate. She was much more difficult to work with because
she could count to 10.
And the English fellow. Whom I really liked but I can't remember his name. He's an art historian.
Susan Bender:
Michael Ore.
Roy Rotheim:

Page 17 of 18

�Michael Ore. I remember we'd go ... Anytime I met with a dean I would always, went with an
agenda and actually hand it to them. A written agenda, it just saved time. He was such a good
listener. I liked working with him because he would listen and take notes and then ask questions.
He wasn't a ready, fire, aim type of a person. And I liked that.
Yeah, I worked with Dave Marcell.
I guess I was there a lot. Skidmore was very good to me. I have no complaints. I was very lucky.
Lynne Gelber:
Okay, anything else that we should cover?
Roy Rotheim:
No, I can'tSusan Bender:
I think we kind of covered a lot. Thank you.
Roy Rotheim:
Did we cover whatever you wanted? No? Yeah. I can tend to be a little loquacious at times.
Lynne Gelber:
No, that was good. Thank you.
Roy Rotheim:
Yeah, well, good luck. You know.
Susan Bender:
Thank you, Roy.
Roy Rotheim:
You can turn it off.

Page 18 of 18

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                    <text>Interview with Murray Levith by Susan Bender &amp; Leslie Mechem (recording tech),
Skidmore College Retiree Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York,
February 26, 2026
Sue Bender:
This is Sue Bender, interviewing Murray Levith for the Skidmore Retiree Oral History Project.
It's November 4th, 2025, and we are in the Lucy Scribner Library on the Skidmore campus.
Welcome, Murray.
Murray Levith:
Thank you.
Sue Bender:
Let's start by reflecting on your formative years. Where did you grow up and what was your
childhood like?
Murray Levith:
I grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and I was a pretty serious musician from about age six. I
played in many orchestras. I thought that I might want to go to a liberal arts college rather than,
for example, the University of Pittsburgh in my hometown, which was then a private university.
And I went to Washington &amp; Jefferson College. Washington &amp; Jefferson had about 900 male
students only, and it was a liberal arts college. I think it was founded by the Presbyterian Church
in 1790, even older than Union College.
I had a very wonderful experience there. I encountered in my freshman composition course
Edwin M. Moseley, who eventually became chair of the English Department at Skidmore, Dean
of the Faculty, Provost, and for a time Acting President. He influenced my whole career. I wasn't
a very intellectual high school student. I hadn't read all the books that I was supposed to have
read, but Edwin made them so interesting when I was a freshman in college that I did read them
all.
I had a very interesting coming to Skidmore College. I did a master's degree at the University of
Nebraska because I wanted to be a poet at that time. And I wanted to study with Karl Shapiro,
who was eventually what amounted to be the Poet Laureate of the U.S. And he was called the
Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress and eventually that became the poet laureate
position. And I had a good and personal relationship with him as a graduate student. I did a
master's degree there in Lincoln, Nebraska, and I played the violin in the Lincoln Symphony as a
professional violinist.We had some interesting soloists. For example, just before she debuted at
the Metropolitan Opera, Leontyne Price played or sang with the Lincoln Symphony, but we also
had Bob Keeshan, Captain Kangaroo, who was another performer with the symphony.
From Lincoln, I went on to Syracuse University to do a Ph.D. The reason I went to Syracuse was
because Edwin went to Syracuse. And there was a group of us at Syracuse who would come to
Saratoga Springs and visit with Edwin and Kay. And I have always been so impressed with
Edwin, but I wanted to mention something about Kay. When we came to their home for dinner
from Syracuse, there was this plush green carpet, and in a corner was a blonde harp. Kay played

Page 1 of 15

�the harp, and I was so impressed with that. I guess I was pretty provincial, but I thought that was
the ultimate of sophistication.
Back to Edwin, I did a book of Festschrift for Edwin in 1978, I believe, and I wanted to read the
first paragraph of the preface to the book because it was my impression of Edwin as a teacher,
and he was a teacher at Skidmore, too, in addition to being the other things.
"Edwin M. Moseley himself exhibited a few of those significant gestures he told us were
characteristics of American writers in the '20s and '30s. He would enter class, place his folder of
notes on the lectern, unbutton the pocket watch from his lapel. We wore church keys, dangling
from a string, in imitation, church keys being can openers, and take attendance. The South
Carolina dialect rolled out to us as cultured, worldly, and exotic as any from Oxford in England.
During the lecture itself, he sallied back and forth in front of us, explaining, asking, analyzing,
provoking. He punctuated insights by smoothing his tie, lightly clapping his hands together,
adjusting his jacket. He dressed immaculately. And doing what we called deep knee bends, like a
pious man at prayer, he invoked the muse of learning with his wise and knowing incantations.
Everything, absolutely everything was written on the blackboard. Significant words were
connected with magical arrows. Lines bisected circles. X's and O's were meaningfully
juxtaposed. At the end of the class hour, when the writing and diagramming was complete and
the blackboard was filled to the edges, as was his coat with chalk dust, Dr. Moseley, with open
hands, slapped the board and declare, 'It's all here. It's all here. It's all here,’ he would say again.
It was for us, for sure.”
Sue Bender:
Lovely, and did Edwin have a role in your coming to Skidmore, then?
Murray Levith:
Well, that's another storyMurray Levith:
... yes.
Sue Bender:
... another story, thenMurray Levith:
Okay.
Sue Bender:
... how you came to Skidmore.
Murray Levith:
I came to Skidmore three weeks into the semester in 1967. My predecessor was a member of the
International Explorers Club. He was an Australian, and he left to lead an expedition to the North
Pole for Bulova Watches. This sounds like an unbelievable story, but my son, who has written a
memoir, has actually talked to this man's son. The man's name was David Humphreys, and so

Page 2 of 15

�here was the situation in 1967. Humphreys, three weeks into the semester, left Skidmore. Edwin
was the Dean. There was a new chair of the English Department, Tom Goethals, who had come
from Sarah Lawrence College, and at Columbia, one of his good friends was John Deal, who was
on my dissertation committee at Syracuse.
John called Tom Goethals, inviting him to a party at Syracuse, and Tom said, "Oh, I can't come. I
have to find someone to plug into this person that left." So here is Murray Levith, whose mentor
was Edwin Moseley as an undergraduate, who went to Syracuse University because Edwin
Moseley made a call and I got a part-time instructorship. Back in those days, that's what
happened. And so anyway, Edwin called and said, "Come over." This was on a Wednesday. I
had a perfunctory interview with him on Thursday. On Monday, I was teaching The Faerie
Queene, and the doors at the English Department at Regents Street were open. Miriam Benkovitz
was in one room listening, Alberta Feynman was in the next room listening, and Julia Hysham
was in the third office listening to me about The Faerie Queene. I guess I passed, and was at
Skidmore for 41 years.
Sue Bender:
Can you describe what the college was like when you arrivedMurray Levith:
Yes.
Sue Bender:
... in 1967?
Murray Levith:
Yes. I think that Edwin was instrumental in trying to take the College from a, and I don't think
the faculty would have said this, but from a finishing school for women to a real academic
institution, a liberal arts college. And Tom Goethals was hired to make the English Department
more academic. He had been at Harvard for his PhD. He was a novelist, he was a scholar, and
although the women in the department then, I think, were good scholars, Miriam Benkovitz was
a PhD from Yale, Alberta Feynman from Columbia, Julia Hysham from Columbia, the tone was
not as academic as it might have been. And the first three young men that were hired by Tom
Goethals were Mark Gelber, Don Stoddard, and Murray Levith.
The town [Saratoga Springs] was a disaster. You could buy one of the mansions on Broadway
for about $35,000. The best restaurants were The Golden Dragon and D'Andrea's downtown.
There was also one strange one called Willie Rum's where the drinks were from Mason jars,
water from Mason jars. So it was kind of, sort of, not so upscale as it is now. The College, for
me, was wonderful. I was a very young man in a college that was all women. I had been to a
college that was all men, and our dating college was at that time Chatham College, which was in
Pittsburgh, 90 miles away. We used to drive back and forth on the weekends. It was kind of
dangerous. So anyway, this was something that I had to ask Edwin about. And so I asked him, I
said, "What's the policy on dating students?" And he said, "Don't make the front page of The
Saratogian."
Sue Bender:

Page 3 of 15

�A different time.
Murray Levith:
A very different time. So I waited until she graduated, and then we started dating, and in
December will have been married 53 years.
Sue Bender:
She being a Skidmore student?
Murray Levith:
She being a Skidmore student whose mother was a Skidmore graduate in the Class of 1940, and
whose father was a Union College graduate. So there's a long tradition here.
Sue Bender:
And what was the physical campus like at that time?
Murray Levith:
There was one... I think the tower was up in the library.
Sue Bender:
On the North Broadway campus.
Murray Levith:
On North Broadway, but it was all downtown.
Sue Bender:
Okay.
Murray Levith:
I had an office at 43 Union Street, which for a 28-year-old assistant professor, or at that time I
was an instructor, hadn't finished my PhD yet, was really amazing. And I could teach whatever I
wanted to, and so I had done my dissertation in the 17th century and had studied English
literature from what was called the Early Modern Period. And Shakespeare was a special interest
of mine, and so I replaced, eventually in a year or two Alberta Feynman, who was the
Shakespeare person. There was another woman, Deborah Kifer, whose husband was in the
History Department, who was also a Early Modern specialist, and I don't know the background
to this story, but somehow she either didn't get tenure or didn't get reappointed or something.
So I was in that slot as a very young person, and I didn't finish my dissertation until 1970,
January 1970, when I became an assistant professor. And then I got another contract and I got
tenure and things went from there. In my first two years at Skidmore, I played the violin in the
Albany Symphony, and Frank Carver, who was in the Music Department at that time, who was a
flute player, we would go down to Albany for two rehearsals before the concert. But with a full

Page 4 of 15

�load, and I should mention loads in a minute, but also these rehearsals in Albany, I played for
two years and then I played in the Skidmore Orchestra for about 20 or 25 years.
I also played in a trio with Dick Speers from the Math Department and Helga Doblin from the
Language Department. And then, so everything was terrific for me, and then came Vietnam, the
Civil Rights Movement, the Student Strike, Bobby Kennedy on campus, Bernadette Devlin, the
troubles in Ireland, she came to campus, Kent State. A lot of big troubles in America as well as
on campuses. Regis Brodie was a professor in the Theater Department, and he asked his
studentsSue Bender:
Wasn’t Regis in Art?
Murray Levith:
... oh, I meant, no, Alan Brody, I'm sorry.
Sue Bender:
Alan Brody, okay.
Murray Levith:
Alan Brody, not Regis. Thank you. Regis was also from Pittsburgh. We had a contingent of
Pittsburgh people at Skidmore, but Alan Brody asked his students to grade themselves. Michael
London, who was in the English Department, gave everybody an A. This was during the strike.
Sue Bender:
And that was in support of the students?
Murray Levith:
Support of the students, yeah.
Sue Bender:
For striking?
Murray Levith:
For striking. They were in the Administration Building. There were all kinds of demonstrations
on campus, and so on. It was a very volatile time, and the professors and instructors had to make
decisions about how they were going to grade the students at the end, what the class policy was
for coming to class, and so on. It was a very difficult time.
Sue Bender:
Who was the president then?
Murray Levith:

Page 5 of 15

�This was Joe Palamountain, and believe it or not, Joe Palamountain would come to me and ask
me to write letters. Let me give you one example. There was an orchestra composed of people
from the community, and Skidmore people from the Music Department and other departments.
And a couple of these people from the community were kids who were serious musicians, and
Frank Carver was the conductor. And he made some comment to one of the kids that, "You
weren't playing on time," or, "You were out of tune," or something. And so this child's mother
called Joe Palamountain and said, "You can't do this," and it really upset this little boy. Not so
little, maybe 16 or 17.
And so Joe came to me and said, "Write a letter to this lady and I'll sign it." And so I told the
story of when I was in the Pittsburgh Youth Symphony. Karl Kritz, who was the associate
conductor of the Pittsburgh Symphony, was our conductor, and he had a cat. And he would bring
the cat to rehearsals, and if we weren't playing just right, he would pick up the cat by the scruff
of the neck and throw the cat against the wall. The cat loved it. And so I wrote the letter and
never heard anything more, but that was just one letter. There were other letters that he asked me
to write as well.
Sue Bender:
What kind of leadership did Edwin provide the faculty in those tumultuous times?
Murray Levith:
I was not... At that point, I was a very young professor, so I really didn't know. I wasn't on CAPT
at that time or some of the major committees. And so I eventually was on CAPTS it was called. I
was the chair of CAPTS, in fact, and I was on many committees.
Sue Bender:
Okay, and just for clarification, CAPT is the Committee on Appointment, PromotionsMurray Levith:
Promotions and Tenure.
Sue Bender:
... and Tenure and Sabbaticals.
Murray Levith:
... and Sabbaticals, but it was CAPT first. No sabbaticals on the end of that, and I had... Well, I'm
going off. I mean, bring me back, but I had wonderful sabbaticals.
Sue Bender:
We will talk about them.
Murray Levith:
Okay. So anyway, we're talking here about the difficult times, and also this was a time of coeducation at Skidmore, and that was difficult, too. We were on a 4-1-4 program with a winter
term in the earliest days of co-education, and this was a way of bringing male students from

Page 6 of 15

�Colgate and other places to intermix with the Skidmore students to do on-campus and offcampus things. Of course, I liked the winter term a lot because it gave me a chance, and this was
in the very early days, to do foreign study courses. I was among the very first persons to take a
group of students to England, and did that a number of times myself and also once with Mac
Oswalt from the Psychology Department.
We studied Freud in Vienna, and then applied Freud to the drama in London was that particular
course. I also did a course in mysticism in literature for 4-1-4. That was an on-campus course.
But what happened, and this often happens, I think, in newer programs, I think it happened also
in the liberal studies program, is that people get tired of it, the new thing. And that happened
with winter term, and my sense was that some professors and some students were taking
advantage of winter terms that were not as academic as they might have been.
Just as a little aside, when I went to college, the semesters were 16 weeks, and you could read a
lot more books in 16 weeks than 13 weeks and get a lot more instruction. And I think that things
have been, I don't know, shaved down too much. Tom Goethals turned the English Department
into a more academic department, but Bud Foulke, who came in and stayed for a while, really
shaped the English Department with its committee structure to be a happy place. I had I can't
imagine a better career than at Skidmore College during those days.
I think those days are over now, but the faculty really shaped things. They shaped the
curriculum. They shaped the academic attitudes. All kinds of good things happened during the
time that I was here. I was on the Presidential Search Committee, which found our first female
president, Jamie Studley. People still come up to me and say, "What did you do? How did you do
that and why did you do that?" And my answer to that, and it was a very good committee, I
should say. Who was on that committee? Bill Dake. There were a whole bunch of people,
including faculty people that were elected from the faculty. Tom Denny was the other faculty
member. You can only hire what's in front of you, and what happened was she was the best, I
thought, and the committee thought the best that was in front of us.
She didn't turn out to be the best for Skidmore. However, to compensate, we got David Porter.
I'll never forget going to Swarthmore College to look at Swarthmore College with my older son.
And David had gone to Swarthmore, and following that I think he went to Princeton. So we're
sitting there in the admissions office, and the person said, "Our college is often confused with a
women's college in New York." I'll never forget that. Our son went to Haverford instead. But
anyway, sabbaticals?
Sue Bender:
Sure. One thing before we leave sort of your early years here, if you could describe a little bit
what it was like as the college moved and the faculty moved from the old campus downtown to
the new campus, and also at the same time that the college was going co-ed, right?
Murray Levith:
Yes.
Sue Bender:
So two big changes happening at once. I wonder if you can talk a little bit about how those things
affected your work and the life of the students on campus?

Page 7 of 15

�Murray Levith:
Sure. We compared ourselves with Vassar, and we said that Vassar stooped to accept men that
were not up to the women's standard. However, and I don't know where this claim came from,
that we accepted men who were equal to the women. Now, I don't know if that's true, but that's
what was said on campus. I found the men in my classes just as good as the women, some even
better, and there were... The women in the early, well, in about 1970, '71, were terrific. In fact,
the college's reputation was not as good as the students were. And I think that's happened all
through Skidmore's history.
You know, we're in a great town, we have a great, beautiful campus. We've had good leadership
and we've had alums. We look at the Science Center, we look at the Wellness Center. We look at
the buildings on campus, and there's no Porter building. There's a Porter Greek-style theater.
Someone should do something about that. He was fabulous, and this is a nice segue into
sabbaticals.
Sue Bender:
Okay.
Murray Levith:
My first sabbatical, I was newly married, and this was to Germany. The community at Skidmore
was terrific. Helga Doblin and Rudy gave me their house in Germany rent-free, gave us their
house rent-free in Grossweil, and their car, and their Fiat, which I immediately totaled in a
special way by... They had a slope into the driveway and they had a metal garage door, and I
managed to slide into the garage door, smashing the front of the car. But they forgave me,
apparently, but other people have benefited from their house in Grossweil. For example, Paul
Hockenos, who was just on campus, Warren and Ann and their family stayed in the same house.
Dick Speers stayed in the same house.
It was very interesting for me to be there, especially as a Jew in a place where Helga pointed out
all the Nazis in the town. And I went to the Gartenschule and learned some German, enough
German to converse, as did Tina. In fact, the teacher always said, "Frau, immer besser," always
better. She passed back the exams. But anyway, it was a wonderful experience for us, a great
experience. That was the first sabbatical. I produced a book, Shakespeare's Names. It's what's in
Shakespeare's names, and the book was published both in England and America, and then 2021,
it was republished and is currently available.
Second sabbatical was to the People's Republic of China, and I think that my foreign study
courses at Skidmore and the Germany experience allowed me to apply for positions to teach in
India and China. India eventually came through, but they came through after China. And we
were so fortunate. We had a 10-year-old and an eight-year-old, and I was a foreign expert and
Tina was a foreign teacher. She had been a high school teacher. And we spent sabbatical there
with our kids, and this was when China was opening up, Deng Xiaoping, and this was just before
Tiananmen in 1989.
Sue Bender:
You were at Qufu University?

Page 8 of 15

�Murray Levith:
Qufu Normal University. Qufu, the city, was Confucius' hometown, so there was the Confucian
Mansion, the Confucian Graveyard, and in the graveyard, we discovered that my 10-year-old
was fluent in Mandarin because we went on a picnic to the graveyard. And there was this old guy
in a kind of military kind of coat, and all of a sudden, they were having a conversation in
Mandarin. We put both of our kids in the Chinese school, but we also took the textbooks from
Lake Avenue, which was the elementary school then, and we sort of homeschooled them during
the two-hour break during that period. And they had... They say... We thought our younger son
had a terrible experience because he was shy and he was eight and they were fighting in school
in between the classes.
But he says now that it was a wonderful experience, and we knew that our older son, who now is
in the government, in the Foreign Service, his... had a great experience, too. And we did, and I
published my second book. I did the galley proof. This was Shakespeare's Italian settings and
names, so it was published by Macmillan in England and St. Martin's in the U.S. And so I not
only taught the students, who were wonderful students, some of them spoke English so well,
never having been out of China. And so that was the second sabbatical.
Sue Bender:
One, before we talk about your other sabbatical, could we follow up on the Qufu University
connectionMurray Levith:
Sure.
Sue Bender:
... [inaudible 00:37:39]? You were the first of the Skidmore professors to teach at Qufu, but
didn't other folks follow you?
Murray Levith:
Yes, actually, Tina and I organized the programSue Bender:
Right.
Murray Levith:
... and it went on for 20 years. In the last few years, Sandy Welter took over. She had been there
as a teacher, and so it was a program that was... I guess it was sort of official and nonofficial. It
didn't seem to become an official program in the sense that other foreign programs were. But I
thought that it really.... Well, I can give you a few examples of people who've gone on. Claude
Brodesser became a journalist afterwards. He's married to Taffy Brodesser-Akner, the novelist,
who writes for The New York Times.
So students had an experience there that they otherwise wouldn't have had after graduating from
Skidmore. And it was a good time in China. There were two universities we were affiliated with.
One was Qufu Normal University, and the other was the University of Petroleum, which was a

Page 9 of 15

�scientific university. But Dave Marcell, David Porter, and I went over to China, and the president
of Qufu University came over here in a delegation both ways. David Porter was wonderful. I
found out all kinds of things about David Porter on this trip. For example, he was an authority on
Oriental rugs. Did you know that?
Sue Bender:
No.
Murray Levith:
In Hong Kong, we went from one rug place to another. But the thing that I remember there is I
don't like heights very much. Is it acrophobia? Is that?
Sue Bender:
Mm-hmm.
Murray Levith:
Yeah, and one of the sacred mountains in China is Mount Tai, and you're supposed to go up to
Mount Tai. And there's this big rock that leans over a gorge, and you're supposed to go over
when the sun is coming up. And so we hiked up, we went to this big rock, and I was panicked.
David Porter held my hand up there. And it was a good time to also be personal with Dave
Marcell, who I had known, who I think was at Skidmore maybe in '66 or '65. I'm not exactly
sure, but I think he was just before me. Bill Brynteson was another History Department person.
But anyway, I got to know there was a real community, and I thought every place was like that,
and soon found out no place was like that. But anyway, and along the way, and ISue Bender:
Could I just have aMurray Levith:
Sure.
Sue Bender:
... quick follow-upMurray Levith:
Sure.
Sue Bender:
... question? And on the Qufu programMurray Levith:
Okay.

Page 10 of 15

�Sue Bender:
... now, faculty went to teach there, but you mentioned students. I didn't realize that students
were... that that program created opportunities for the students.
Murray Levith:
For students. Yes.
Sue Bender:
How did that work? Did students go over to teach?
Murray Levith:
Yes.
Sue Bender:
Aah.
Murray Levith:
China was very interested in getting Native American speakersSue Bender:
Okay.
Murray Levith:
... and what they would teach, it was called Speaking and Listening. And we oriented them. Tina
and I basically talked to them about what they were supposed to be doing, and they were getting
teaching, actually, teaching experience when they were doing that. And faculty also went over,
business faculty. I'm trying to think of... Oh yeah, education faculty, art faculty, and there were
exchanges that were done because faculty from Qufu came to our place. And we also tried to get
students from China to come, and at that time we couldn't do that. It wasn't allowed.
And we had minders, people who were watching us to make sure we weren't doing the wrong
thing. And I remember teaching Tess of the d'Urbervilles, and there was a knock at the door. And
a student monitor, they had monitors there, they're sort of the head student, usually a Communist
Party person, said, "We were upset when you mentioned something that was not quite polite."
And it had something to do with Tess, if you know the novel. But anyway, and it was great fun. I
mean, we played basketball, we had all kinds of interactions with students, and even interactions
with students who eventually came to the U.S. to study.
Sue Bender:
Wonderful. Terrific experience sounds like.
Murray Levith:
It was.

Page 11 of 15

�Sue Bender:
Yeah. Did you have other sabbatical experiences that you wanted to share?
Murray Levith:
Well, I also went to Cape Cod for a year, and I was working on a book then as well that I could
have done anywhere, but my brother-in-law and sister-in-law are in Cape Cod, and so we rented
a house and...
Sue Bender:
So is that sort of all part of your sense of the way in which Skidmore was supporting faculty
scholarship? Is thatMurray Levith:
I would say this. My scholarly production would not have happened without my colleagues, my
English Department, the happiness that was here at that time. You know Creative Thought
Matters, that slogan, I was a provincial kid from Pittsburgh, and the world opened. It was, I
couldn't have had a better... This is what I wanted to do. I mean, how many people get to do what
they want to do?
Sue Bender:
That's wonderful. Well, those are all wonderful stories, and it sounds like a really productive,
happy career here at Skidmore, but as we all know, life of a faculty member is never
unidimensional.
Murray Levith:
That's right.
Sue Bender:
So are there any significant challenges that you experienced for the college, for teaching, sort of
governance here at the college? What were some of the major challenges that you recall along
the way?
Murray Levith:
Well, I mentioned one already, the presidential search. Also, the English Department had some
flare-ups. We had times when there were a bunch of people up for tenure, and there was even
someone who sued the English Department. Is that me?
Sue Bender:
Mm-mm.
Murray Levith:
But anyway, and I know that Ralph [Ciancio] and Bud Foulke were involved in things that were
done outside of the college that they had to do and answer for. But I thought during... As much

Page 12 of 15

�as I knew, I thought things were very fairly done, and I think that Bud Foulke deserves a lot of
credit for this because of the Curriculum Committee, but especially the Personnel CommitteeSue Bender:
Is that Departmental Curriculum [inaudible 00:48:28]?
Murray Levith:
... Departmental, Curriculum, and Personnel Committee. But the thing, too, is we got to teach
what we wanted to teach. I don't think people were forced into situations, except in one instance.
We divided Composition into three parts, 103, 105, and 107. We gave a test right at the
beginning, an essay test, and put some of the more giftedSue Bender:
A test for the first-year students.
Murray Levith:
... first... Yeah, first-year students to see the skills, the writing skills of the first-year incoming
freshmen. And so we separated some out who were already good writers into one 107, and then
people that needed extra help were in 103.
Now, Bud's idea was that everyone in the department would teach 103. So this was an important
kind of thing to do. So Mimi Ciancio and I were there in line, and we were teaching 103, and we
looked behind us and there was no one in back of us. We were it for the first couple of years. No
one wanted to teach the students that needed extra help, and most of the students in Composition
were in 105. But we had some just excellent students, students that went to grad school, that
became professors and so on. Yeah, so that was one of the downers, but I never was asked to
teach anything that I didn't want to.
Sue Bender:
That's an important plus for a faculty member inMurray Levith:
EspeciallySue Bender:
... [inaudible 00:50:48].
Murray Levith:
... in English. Yeah, I know that Ralph Ciancio taught at Carnegie Tech, which is now Carnegie
Mellon, and it was the Service Department. There were no English majors there.
Sue Bender:
And English, how would you assess English's position among the departments at Skidmore?

Page 13 of 15

�Murray Levith:
Well, Edwin was hired as the chair of the English Department and quickly... I think it was
Josephine Case decided that he should be Provost or a Dean of... No, Dean of the Faculty, and
then he got to be Provost. And there was a dustup with Edwin because Joe Palamountain gave
him tenure without going through the faculty. And it was a big, big, big to-do because at that
time, the faculty, there weren't as many administrators, and the faculty were running things, you
know?
Sue Bender:
Wouldn't happen today.
Murray Levith:
No.
Sue Bender:
So are there any other memories that you would like to share with us of your time at Skidmore?
Have we covered all the topics you wanted to?
Murray Levith:
Right. Let's see. Yeah, the opportunities to teach in England, Richmond College, at ASE, where
in addition to the two summers, I taught for a semester forSue Bender:
And ASE is?
Murray Levith:
... is Advanced Studies in England, the Bath program.
Sue Bender:
Mm-hmm.
Murray Levith:
And let's see, what else? That's about it.
Sue Bender:
It sounds like a very rich and rewarding career, Murray.
Murray Levith:
It was, and it goes on. I'm working on aSue Bender:
That's what I wanted to ask you.

Page 14 of 15

�Murray Levith:
... I'mSue Bender:
Since retirement, what haveMurray Levith:
... right.
Sue Bender:
... we been doing?
Murray Levith:
A long time ago, I started a book about two of my professors, one from Nebraska and one from
Syracuse. Two poets, mid-Century American Jewish poets, Karl Shapiro and Delmore Schwartz.
I started this book 35 years ago. I was in classes with both of them, and I'm now on the last draft
chapter of the book, and I've also taught probably a dozen courses for ALL, which isSue Bender:
Academy for Lifelong Learning.
Murray Levith:
... and for lifelong learning. And I'll be teaching one this winter on John Steinbeck.
Sue Bender:
Lovely. So it sounds like your literary studies did not retire when you did.
Murray Levith:
Well, I really loved what I was doing. I loved the scholarship and I especially loved the teaching,
and it's nice to teach senior students who read the material very carefully.
Sue Bender:
Absolutely. Well, this has been lovely. I really have enjoyed hearing your reminiscences and
learning things that I didn't know about. We really appreciate your time with us. Thank you,
Murray.
Murray Levith:
Oh, thank you. I enjoyed it, too.

Page 15 of 15

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                <text>During her years at the College (1976-2007), Joanna Zangrando was a central figure in Skidmore’s American Studies Department and a leading voice for incorporating interdisciplinarity and the study of diverse perspectives into the College curriculum. In this interview she reflects on her experiences helping to create and sustain Skidmore's signature Women’s Studies and Liberal Studies programs.</text>
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                    <text>Interviewee: Dave Marcell
Years at Skidmore: 1964-1992; 2001-2008
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Lucy Scribner Library, Skidmore College
Date of Interview: January 15, 2019
00:00:00 - Introduction by Gelber
00:00:30 - Where Marcell grew up, history of his education.
00:00:45 - Story of how Marcell heard about the job at Skidmore College
00:02:55 - The American Studies program at Skidmore during the ‘60s
00:04:20 - The death of Val Wilson and Marcell accepting the job offer at Skidmore
00:06:00 - Further description of the American Studies Department and Marcell’s
responsibilities as the head of the department
00:07:24 - The classes Marcell taught during the beginning of his career
00:09:00 - Growth of the program and becoming a department
00:10:08 - Friction between the American Studies department and other departments
00:10:55 - Course registration of Fall ‘64
00:13:00 - Marcell’s biggest challenges during his career
00:15:20 - The hiring of new professors in the American Studies Department
00:16:00 - How Marcell became the Provost and why the job was open in the first place
00:20:00 - Comparison of Skidmore to other colleges at which Marcell worked
00:21:30 - Challenges of being the Provost at Skidmore College- becoming a co-ed college
00:24:40 - The orange juice riots
00:26:00 - Development of new landscaping and buildings on campus
00:28:20 - Aggregate cost of all capital investment at Skidmore
00:28:47 - How Skidmore came to build the new campus
00:30:28 - Funding new buildings on campus
00:33:15 - Expanding the applicant pool beyond just women
00:35:00 - Mishap writing letters to parents of prospective students
00:37:30 - Describing the collegial culture of Skidmore
00:39:55 - The tightness of the budget during the ‘60s and ‘70s
00:42:40 - Number of females on the faculty
00:44:30 - Rejection of a union for the faculty
00:45:50 - Marcell describes the nursing program
00:47:30 - Downfall of the nursing program
00:52:00 - Beginning the Phi Betta Kappa Chapter at Skidmore
00:54:20 - Discussing how special Skidmore was as an employer in Marcell’s experience
00:57:00 - Having to fire someone for the first time
00:58:00 - Discussing positive relationships with colleagues
00:59:03 - Closing remarks

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                    <text>Interview with Dave Marcell by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree
Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, January 15, 2019.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber and I'm here with Dave Marcell.
It's January15th, 2019. So Dave, let's start by telling us where you
grew up grew up.
DAVE MARCELL: I grew up in central Florida in the 40s and 50s, my
parents retired after World War II. I went to public school in Deland,
Florida, and then attended the university that was in the townStetson University. One of my professors at Stetson was an
American studies PhD from Yale. He was my mentor and ideal, and
thanks to his influence I went on the Yale. Did a doctorate in
American Studies from '58 to '64. The last year I was at Yale, I was
teaching in the history department and finishing my dissertation
and I got a phone call from the secretary in the American Studies
department. She said, "Would you please come over here. There's a
man here who wants to interview you." I said, "What's that for?" She
said, “For a job!" I said, "Well, I've got a job." She said "Well, I
don’t know what to do with them. Would you please come over
here? He's very nice." And I said, "Well, I've got pick my
dissertation up from the bindery and drop it off. I'll be over there in
an hour." And I went over, and it was Edwin Mosley.
LG: And Edwin's position at the time was?
DM: Edwin Mosley's position was Dean of the Faculty at Skidmore
College. We had a nice chat.
LG: Do you know how he had heard of you?
DM: He was, he just happened to swing by. He was visiting doctoral
programs in American Studies, and I don't know where he had been
before. His degree was from Syracuse, which had a doctoral program.
But, anyway, we had a nice chat. I remember saying that I had a job I
was going to continue on as an instructor for the following year, but
he described Skidmore and the position and I liked him and I said,
"Sure I'll come up." And so, I came up with their American Studies
department.

�LG: Now, was there an American Studies department?
DM: No, there was an American Studies program and it had been up and
running for three or four years and the person who was coordinating,
directing it, was leaving. He had gotten tenure, but he was leaving and
he'd accepted a position at Long Island University. So, I came up and
they had a long schedule of two days of meetings and it started off
with 1/2 an hour with the president of the college, with Val Wilson,
and I think this was a Thursday afternoon. I spent 1/2 an hour, 45
minutes with him- lovely, lovely man- and it was just a wonderful
conversation and I thought, "My gosh, if the leadership of the college
is reflected by this man, he would be a wonderful person to know."
And then the Dean turned me over to a faculty member named Irwin
Levine. He put Irwin on my case he did. He didn't want the fellow
who was leaving to introduce me to the students because there'd been
some complexity about his departure and his relationship with the
other students. So anyway, Irwin took me by the hand, the arm and
squired me around and we were instantly friends. And the rest sort of
his history.
LG: Except that Val WIlson...
DM: I went back to New Haven, picked up the New York Times on
Sunday, and there was Val Wilson's obituary. He had died either that
afternoon or the next afternoon. He was out playing tennis with a
student. He had a heart condition, and he knew that he had this
condition, but it was still a very sudden and terrible thing. So Edwin
Mosley called up and said, well, our decision will be delayed but
anyway, the visit was just terrific. I loved Saratoga and, anyway, they
made me an offer and I accepted it. The date of this, I remember
because I came up here on the 15th of April and... the year? Oh,
God. 1964. Yeah, I remember driving up the Northway thinking,
"Gosh, I wonder if I'll be coming this way again." And so, anyway,
they made the offer and I accepted it and it was, it was an unusual
organizational structure because the American Studies program-and I
think was the only interdisciplinary program that had a major- there
was an Asian studies program, but I don't even think it had a minor
at that time. Anyway, what the director of American Studies did was
offer core thematic courses in American culture and then the student
major would flesh out this core of courses with courses with courses

�in the discrete departments in the American subject areas. And as it
happened in those days, the American assistants in history,
government, or philosophy were all just really super people so the
aggregate of the program, depending on how the students organized
their courses, was really terrific.
LG: So your title was what?
DM: Director of the American studies program. I
was...
LG: And your responsibility was...
DM: I coordinated all the courses, I supervised all the majors, and the
majors were only juniors and seniors, but there were about 20. I
would guess something like that. I taught- in those days the full load
was six courses. I got one course relief from doing all of that other
stuff and then I had to fabricate from whole cloth, five new courses,
and coordinate with the students supervise the senior theses, which
was part of the requirement in those days...
LG: So what courses did you teach? When you started?
DM: I had a two-semester sequence called the history of American
civilization, which was a freshman and sophomore lecture coursetwo lectures in one discussion group a week. And then I had
seminars in different subject areas. I had one called American
Documents that took traditional all major readings in the subject
area. And then I had an interest in American intellectual history. I
had, I wrote a dissertation on the idea of progress and its place in the
pragmatic tradition, James Dewey and Beard, so I taught a course in
American Intellectual history. Gosh, I can even remember- a senior
seminar in how to use interdisciplinary sources to flesh out and put
into context certain events and episodes in American history and so
forth.
LG: How many students were in there at the time?
DM: In the seminars there would be anywhere from 10 to 15. In the large
freshman course, there were 50 or 60 and it was it was a full load. I
don't remember a lot of it because it went by so fast. We had a new

�baby.
LG: So you had 50-60 people in one section?
DM: Yeah. Large lecture, two lectures a week, and I broke it down into
three or four discussion sections. And then the program grew, and in
about, by about '67 we really needed another faculty member and
were authorized to do that. I hired a guy from the University of
Pennsylvania. Brilliant, wonderful colleague, Stuart Bluman. Did
you ever remember Stu Bluman? He spent most of his career at
MIT and then at Cornell and he was with us for a couple of years.
And at that point we became a department and what, what status
that gave us, I do not know, but it created a lot of friction with other
departments.
LG: Like history?
DM: History, Philosophy. Back in those days the departments were really
quite siloed and there was great emphasis on each department as a
major. There were, other than the Asian Studies program and
American Studies, there weren't any interdisciplinary majors. It
wasn't until the late 60s the students could create an elective major
and then later until the Liberal studies curriculum came into being,
and the college made a macro commitment to interdisciplinary team
as part of its identity was almost a complete reversal of what I
experienced as a as a young faculty member here.
LG: Do you think the conflict was competition for majors?
DM: Oh yes, oh my goodness. My first formal experience at Skidmore
was registration of for the fall semester of '64 and symbolically, the
registration was down in the Canfield Casino and each department
had a table and people could go around and pick courses out. And
there was a senior History major who wanted to take the course in
American Documents, but that was a 200-level and she needed a
300-level and I said well I think what I can do is give you some
extra assignments, and you can sign up for an independent study.
You'll take the 200-level course, do this extra work... and she's all,
"That sounds wonderful." So I signed off. Five minutes later, like a
V2 rocket, the chair of the history department was in front of me,
Louise Dalby, "What are you doing, blah blah blah." I told her what

�happened. She said you didn't ask my permission. I said, "Oh, well,
it's better to ask permission than excuses, and so forth. Do I have
it?" She said, "Of course." Anyway, we became good friends and
over the years after that. But I remember someone describing to me
the departmentalization as a small well-defined fiefdom of whose
boundaries were patrolled by the chair of the department. And that
that may echo with some of your recollections, too.
LG: What were your biggest challenges, over the years, do you think?
DM: Juggling it all, because the field of American studies had a kind of
metabolism that was just very rapid, because of its multidisciplinarity.
It has all kinds of disciplines and subdisciplines that feed into it.
Trying to stay on top of what was happening with the field, as well as
make sure that whatever courses you were putting together would be
useful and recognizable by people in the field was a challenge. I was
lucky I- the second year that I was at Skidmore, '65 or or '66, I went
to the state meeting of the American Studies Association and became
the editor of a bibliography that came out every year on studies in the
theory and teaching of American studies. So I did that for about 10
years and that gave me a kind of professional reason to keep
surveying the field and seeing what new programs were offered.
What new methodologies and approaches were emerging and so
forth. So I kept changing my readings in my courses because when
you come out of the graduate program, I was a history- government
major as an undergraduate. I had taken one American literature
course, but so I had to educate myself in a lot of the areas. So I just
kept changing my readings and then try to keep up with myself and
stay a paragraph or two ahead of the students. I was also trying to
write, and get the book done ...
LG: And your program kept growing.
DM: And then growing the program kept
growing.
LG: So then you did some hiring?
DM: We hired Prof. Bluman, Stu Bluman, and at what time? I guess about
'69 or '70. We hired Mary Lynn, who had spent a year teaching in
the history department and gave another dimension to American

�Studies. I was trying very hard not to duplicate work that was being
done by the Americanists in the other areas, and but by that time,
we probably had a total, oh, I don't remember, 30 majors at junior
and senior level. And it just kept growing as an enterprise and I
stayed as chairman of the department until '77 and then became
Provost and academic VP.
LG: Now, why did that happen?
DM: It happened because I was elected to the search committee for the
Provost and we had interviewed three or four candidates and I got a
call from the President asking if I would have lunch with him. That
was Joe Palamountain, and he asked if I would be willing to resign
from the search committee and become a candidate for the Provost
job. And I said, "Well if it's okay with the other members of the
search committee and if it's okay with the CAPTS committee, yes."
And so he did all those bases...
LG: In retrospect, do you know why that reconfiguration was taking place?
DM: What had happened, and it happened about three or four years after I
first arrived at Skidmore, Edwin Mosley, who was Dean of the
Faculty, his position was changed into Provost and Dean of the
faculty and Norma McCurry, who had been the Dean of the College
and who had been in effect, the chief academic officer was moved to
report to Edwin. Norma was a brilliant, wonderful woman her- She
was a linguist, but she had been in effect, the chief student affairs
officer. Edwin, who was a very, very academic affairs. He was he was
a very distinguished scholar as well as a just a legendary teacher and
so the that division of labor, I think for both of them worked out well.
And so what happened was the other person became Dean of the
Faculty, do I remember who it was? I'm not even sure. They divided
it up at some point. Who became the Dean? Eric Weller became the
Dean of Studies and that supplemented some of the academic
advising work that Norma had been responsible for. But, by the time
Edwin was being replaced, Edwin became ill, and I remember there
had to be an acting Dean and whether there was an acting Provost or
not, I don't remember. The positions were separated for the purposes
of that search, and they ran the search for the Provost first. And then
when I was appointed, my responsibility was to run the search for the
Dean of the Faculty. That became Eric. We ran a national search on...

�boy, these are old synapses, I haven't tested these in a long time
(laughs). But Ed, as you can imagine, anybody who moves into an
upper level administrative position, after having spent 14 years as a
faculty member... Memories are long, issues are complicated, and
every idiotic thing I said as a young first or second year faculty
member trailed behind me. But, looking back at Skidmore from
having moved to other institutions and having worked at- after I
return took I took early retirement here when I was 55LG: And what year was that?
DM: '91, and I worked at Rollins College for two years. I worked at
Bennington College for two years and seeing those institutions and
comparing them with Skidmore, Skidmore had a much more
professional and collegial culture than those other institutions. As a
matter fact, when I went over and worked at Bennington,
Bennington was in the middle of a capital campaign and in the
middle of that capital campaign, the trustees seized control of the
college from the faculty, fired 1/3 of the faculty, and went through
the convulsions that... well, they were, they were on the weekly
supplement to the New York Times. You may remember some of
those things, they ripple out, and Bennington had a culture where
every faculty member felt they had a veto over anything at the
college and they had a brilliant and interesting and wonderful
faculty. But as an organizational structure, their culture was just
absolutely toxic.
LG: But let's get back to Skidmore. Once you became Provost, what were
the highlights, and what were the challenges?
DM: Well, the challenges were basically to support the administrative
structures that were already in place in terms of both the academic,
this cultural student affairs area. All of the deans and directors on the
academic side reported up to the Provost and then there were two
other VP for business and development. So, one, I had to learn
enough about the discrete areas of student affairs, computers. The
computers, IT reported to the Provost, and so forth to make sure that
we have the right people running those operations I inherited. For
example, admissions, about which I knew absolutely nothing. But
we happily had a just brilliant, wonderful director of admissions,

�Benny Wise, and I asked her what she needed and what I needed to
know in order to be her supervisor. She took me under her wing.
And we were off and running. One of the first things that she said is
we have done some things and haven't planned ahead for doing
them. I said, "Well, what are you thinking of?" "Well, we went
coed." Well I knew we had done that, but I knew it from the point of
view of a faculty member. I said, "What are the kinds of planning
steps we might've taken and shouldn't-should have?" She said,
"Well, all we did was in effect, say the words, we would no longer
discriminate against male applicants, and we sat back and waited.
And sure enough they began to dribble in." But, and mercifully,
because she was such a creative person, she had a whole series of
recommendations on how to make the college more attractive to
male applicants. But all of these were things that couldn't be siloed,
they had to be decisions made in consultation with the faculty, with
plant, with development, with alumni affairs, and so forth.
LG: Can you give me an example?
DM: Well, how does one prepare a 90% single-sex institution to morph
into a 60/40%? What are the things that competitive, coeducational
institutions offered that we don't? Well, physical education and
athletics was one of them, but was only one of them. They had to
change all of the dietetic expectations. Do you remember the orange
juice riots?
LG: I remember, when the trustees were here. Can you describe the orange
juice riots?
DM: Well, the boys, as they went through the lines over in the dining hall
wanted seconds and thirds, and that was a new experience for the staff
over there for planning, etc. etc. etc. And they wanted seconds on
orange juice (laughs) and this is one of the things about Skidmore and
I don't think I appreciated at the time, but Skidmore was in the in the
business of inventing itself as an institution on so many fronts. We were
building a new campus. That was one decision that we made which was
made in the nick of time. We went coeducational and that's another one
made in the nick of time and all of these- both of those decisions
involved huge leaps of faith. I remember when I first got here that Eric
was taken out to see the new campus by Levine and we drove out into
the woods and there was a backhoe digging a hole which became the
basement of the library.

�And I began to realize as I worked at the college after five or 10
years that every time we built a building, the next year, the interior
space of that building would have to be changed because it wasn't
just right. And so we were, we were lucky enough to be flexible
enough to imagine that as we grew programmatically, we had to
change the landscape, we had to change the environment and that in
turn changed one of the widgets that was planning the next stage,
and so forth. And we were doing this on a shoestring. The
endowment for Skidmore when it made the decision to build a new
campus was under $1 million and we'd never raised capital money.
There was one project I heard about later that we raise the money for
father's hall that was on the old campus and that was raised through
parental solicitation, but the early campus planning that we
undertook projected that the new campus would take 25 years and
$25 million. Here we are, how many years later the new campus is
still- and the latest building is going up- cost more than the...
LG: The Integrated Sciences Building.
DM: The integrated sciences building cost more than the whole campus.
When Joe retired, I remember him, Joe Palamountain. Joe was
president from '65 to '87. I remember when he bid farewell and
retired from the campus. He reported that during his tenure, we had
constructed 37 buildings. What, how many are we done now? it
must be 90 or 100.
LG: And some of them have been taken down and replaced (laughs).
DM: Yeah! I asked somebody in the administration the other day whether
we had an aggregate cost of all of the capital investment in
Skidmore, in what the campus is now, and nobody quite has it. So,
anyway, I guess I keep shifting my focus because I didn't prepare
for this, but looking back, it was an act of faith.
How Skidmore came to build the new campus was a series of
developments that nobody could imagine. The campus, the Hilton
estate, had been in probate ever since the 30s. Lucy Skidmore
Scribner had tried to get it for the college but it didn't get out of
whatever the complexities were behind that until 1960, and we had a
parent who was on the Board of Trustees at RPI, J. Eric Johnson, who
was the CEO of Texas Instruments, and his daughter had been a
student at Skidmore and she'd gotten ill. I don't know the details, but

�the college had just taken wonderful care of her, they'd bent over
backwards to make sure she didn't lose time, and he was so impressed
by that, that when the Hilton estate came on the market, he offered to
buy it and donate to the college if the college would build from
scratch a whole new campus. And he did that, as Joe Palamountain
used to tell the story: We took a deep breath and decided to go for
broke and we almost did. (laughs) And he bought this piece of
property, 650 acres, $130,000 donated to the college and we went on
a- and this is all before I arrived. We had, I think was a Ford
foundation grant, to plan the first iteration of new campus planning
and that was what was in process when I joined the faculty in '64. We
hired architects from San Antonio, Ford and Carson. They had built a
number of campuses, one of which was Trinity University in San
Antonio. We have some buildings that look very much like that
campus. But the planning was systematic, and so forth. Most
institutions, most mature colleges, if they venture in a new capital
project, the Board won't authorize it unless you've got half in hand
and half in site. The only building that I think we may have been able
to do that with was the Zankel Music Hall because Arthur Zankel left
us a bequest. And everything else, all we had were plans and hopes
and dreams and a certain amount of momentum. And we had a, the
New York State dormitory bond issue would- they bonded out some
of the first buildings that were built. This library that we’re sitting in
now was the firstLG: First building?
DM: First building to open, and it opened in either '65 or '66. Do you know
what it cost? 1.4 million. And so, but what happened is, we just kept
venturing and I wasn't aware of this at all. I didn't think about these
things when I was a faculty member. I was trying to get my exams
graded and so forth, and so but every year as we constructed more,
built more, grew more, our capacity to raise money grew and our
ability to attract more students grew. And one of the reasons why
Benny Wise was so concerned that we hadn't been planful in going
coed was that we'd missed opportunities, because in the decade of
the 70s a lot of single- sex institutions went coed. Well, our original
plan was that we would build a campus for 2,000 women that was
what we envisioned in '62, three, four, not realizing the market for
women was going to get extremely tough and tight in the 70s.

�LG: Because they could then go to other institutions.
DM: They had more choices. Yeah, I remember vividly my first meeting
with Louise Wise. I said, you know, "What are your biggest problems
and how can I help?" I said, "I don't know anything about your area,
but if you know what you need, you tell me and we're going to go get
it for you." She said, "We need to expand the applicant pool." I said,
"Tell me about that. What was our applicant pool this year?" She said,
"Oh, 1,830." I said, "How many did we accept?" "Just under 1,830."
And I said, "What were we trying to shoot for as a goal?" We were
trying to shoot for, I think, was 400 students in the freshman class and
I said, "So you're telling me that we are not a selective institution
now, but we aspire to become one?" "Yes." "So, okay, how do we do
this?" She had a whole series of ideas. One was using new computer
capabilities to communicate with the families of applicants in a very
targeted and personal way. And I said, "Well, how can I help?" She
said, "I have a project for you. I want you to write a letter as the Chief
Academic Officer of the College to the parents of each student and
tell them why, from an academic point of view, you think Skidmore
would be a good place for their son or daughter." I got to work, and
we cobbled up a letter. She was also a very good editor, happily, and
letters went out. I get a letter back almost in returned mail. This was
this was in March of of my first whole year and it was from a father
who said, "Dear Provost Marcell, happy to get your letter. I found....
he said but how are you going to find a roommate for my son
Nancy?" And I said, "Oh, golly." So I sat down, "Mr. Owens, we're
just venturing as a new way of communicating with parents, we're
personalizing our communications, and unfortunately the computer
kicked out the wrong gender for your letter and I apologize, but don't
worry we'll take good care of Nancy should she decide to come here."
And I signed this and thought, I can't send this out. I said, "P.S. I still
can't understand why you named your son Nancy." (Laughs) Anyway,
come September, there's a knock on my door and here's this very nice
guy standing there with a very sheepish young woman, and it was
Nancy. But that was the kind of the thing that Louise knew what we
should be doing, and she had all kinds of other ideas. And the same
thing with computers and so forth. I could barely type a letter on the
computer, but I talked with the people in what is now IT, what did we
need, and was able to go out and find Ken Hapeman. You may
remember Ken, I said the same thing to him: "You tell me what you
need and I'll try to get it for you." And help me understand why you

�needed it and so forth and so on. So it was, it was easy to do because
the institution had such a good collegial culture.
LG: Could you describe that culture a little bit?
DM: Well, I first experienced it as a faculty member on committees.
Academic Freedom and Rights, Tenure, Faculty Council. Those
kinds of things. But there was also one committee, that I don't even
remember what it was called, but it monitored the budget. And there
were two faculty members sitting on it, and so forth, and I just began
to realize that while I thought, I probably had been here five or six
or seven years before I went on that committee. I thought I knew the
college pretty well, and until we walked through the budget, I
realized I didn't anything about why these budgets were there, why
they were organized the way they work, what the history was of
each line item in the budget. And it took three or four years to get
that, but there was never any- that I experienced- never any attempt
to limit the information flow between administration and faculty,
and there were always rumors that Ted Butler really had a pot of
gold.
LG: Do you want to say, for the record, who Ted ButlerDM: Ted Butler was the budget officer and chief accountant, but what I
realize, and in those days that the total operating budget of the
college was maybe $20 million. Do you know what our contingency
fund was for the college? $250,000 for everything. And every budget
was so tight that if any operating area of the college could come in
with a surplus, it could be then used for those areas that couldn't
control her budgets and so forth. Every budgetary year was an act of
faith and throwing of the dice. There was one year, about, and I didn't
know this until after I retired and read the history of Skidmore. We
had four buildings going up at same time and we didn't have the
money for any of them, other than what we were able to borrow
through bonding and whatever the capital campaign was going to be
able to do that year. We got, and you may remember this because it
happened- when did you come?
LG: '66.

�DM: '66. It happened in 1970. Our auditors provided an audit report to the
Board of Trustees that they could not assure our publics that
Skidmore would be a going concern given the value of the assets, the
indebtedness, the cash on hand, etc. etc. And that's a crisis for an
institution. And it was reported to the Board and the Board said we
will plunge on ahead, we will redouble our fundraising activities etc.
etc. We'll either launch a new capital campaign or something and
anyways, looking back from this vantage point, Skidmore seems very
different. One of the ways we were funding the new campus- when I
first got here in '64, the student population was somewhere between
1,350 and 1,400 students and that was '64. In '65, we grew to 1,500
students, we added 10 faculty members that year and we were going
out and hiring young faculty at competitive prices and, I don't know,
somebody must've been worried about how we were, because we
hired at competitive prices, how we were going to stay competitive
for those new 10 faculty as they aged in place because Skidmore's
upper level salaries were not competitive, and so forth. So here we
were trying to make it up as we went.
LG: Do you think it was because there were a lot of females on the faculty?
DM: That was part of it because I know there had been times that I heard
about back in the depression where married couples had to split one
salary and women were notoriously underpaid, etc. Probably when I
came here, 3/5 of the faculty were female, something like that. It
was like you, somewhere I heard this image at a development
conference, and it really struck me to the quick. It's like imagining
some guy running down the street with a bag of bicycle parts and is
trying to put the bicycle together, get on it and pedal and accelerate
all at same time. And thinking back, this is what Skidmore was
going through. I can remember in '70 or '72. All of a sudden we
were not to get the salary increase for the next year and what a blow
this was to people. We all thought, "Oh my God!" Well, we
managed to scratch up, I think a 2% increase belatedly after the
damage was done from telling everybody no raises this year.
LG: Yeah, faculty wasn't happy about that, were they?
DM: Faculty was ever happy about anything. And I'll tell you one of the
reasons why they're not happy. And this is sort of self-analysis, too.
Faculty are really smart and every faculty we've got is the expert in

�their field.
LG: Do you think that's why the faculty ultimately rejected a union?
Remember that?
DM: Did we ever really seriously consider a
union?
LG: We had representatives.
DM: Several groups were talking about it I know. I don't know, but it's very
hard to go from a situation where, say you're in a department of 10
people and you're the expert on so-and-so, but you've also got
opinions about everything, and I remember trying to grasp all of the
things that in '77 I suddenly found myself administratively
responsible for, and I didn't know anything about. So I'm thinkin,
"Okay, well...." Anyway.
LG: Those are challenges! Okay so what do you think was the greatest
moment for you? Of course, of your career here.
DM: Gosh. I'll start at the other end. The most difficult series of experiences
was the closing of the nursing department. And that that was difficult
personally because the first year that I was here I had in my freshman
class a senior nurse who was just brilliant. She was just, and then over
the next couple of years, the old nursing pattern was you spend your
first year in Saratoga then go to New York for two years of nursing, you
take advantage of all those clinical sites and all of the sophistication of
the hospitals, and this and that, and then you'd come back to Saratoga
for your senior year. And the women who came back to Saratoga from
their senior year, they were worldly, they were cosmopolitan. They hadyou talk about growth- and anyways so I always just loved the nurses.
And then one of the things that happened in the late 70s, as I kept
working with Louise Wise for admissions, she said, "We're going to
have a hard time enrolling our class in the nursing program." She
alerted me to that about the second or third year. I said, "What's
happening? Why, why? We have had at Skidmore since the 20s a
baccalaureate nursing program that really is a flagship program." I
would venture to say that of all the programs we had at Skidmore, it
had the most power and prestige of any of our programs. Better than
art, better than, I don't know, what our strong programs were.

�LG: Can you describe the downfall?
DM: Well, what was happening across the country and, finally by the time
our program graduated the last nursing student in '85. Statistically,
women who wanted a career in medicine, more women wanted MDs
than BSs in nursing. And nursing programs all around the country,
distinguished programs were just folding. Well, it's a complicated
thing. As we began to realize that this was a problem for Skidmore,
we had a building on 38th St., a campus that housed 80 some odd
students, classrooms, labs- wonderful building, beautiful piece of
location, right around the corner from the big-what was a big hospital
down there? Anyway. I remember the year that we finally made the
decision that we would close the program, Louise had said we need to
enroll 40 new nursing students. We have an applicant pool of X. And
if we get 15, we'll be lucky. And we needed to fill those beds in the
nursing building down there. I don't know what the building cost.
Anyway, it was happening all over the country and we had done
studies. The chair of the board directed me to make a study about the
field of nursing and what he wanted was a ringing endorsement of the
nursing program. I spent three months doing as much research as I
could. I came back with a program with a report that said, unless we
can find some way of either distinguishing ourselves as different or,
whatever, our program is not going to be competitive and that's that.
And next we started off with what was, historically, I think probably
the strongest program in the college. It was just market forces and, oh
God, and we had a very strong nursing faculty. Half of them were
graduates of Skidmore and they were fiercely loyal to the program, to
the college, and this and that. And one of the things that, as I was
trying make this report, we had started a UWW nursing program, and
we had 1/2 a dozen students in it. But we had to make use of the
Skidmore faculty in order to deliver that program to the UWW
students. Well, I said, "Well, is there any nursing program we can
affiliate with?" So I went down and talked with the people at Russell
Sage.
Russell Sage has a very respectable nursing program. And I raise this
with the faculty down there and they just curled their lips and would
have nothing to do with it because the clinical sites that were available
in this area did not compare with the clinical sites in New York. And
they were right! On the other hand, what does it take to produce a
baccalaureate nursing graduate? Did you have to have all... Anyway, it
was doubly complicated as I was to learn because the National League

�for Nursing, which was the organization that controlled the standards
for the profession, said you could not transfer a course in nursing from
one academic program to another. In other words, if you were halfway
through your nursing schedule at Sage you couldn't pick up your
nursing credits and transfer to Skidmore. The NLN wouldn't....so
anyway...
LG: I'd like to end this on a high note, though...
DM: (laughs) You can edit out some stuff, I
hope.
LG: One of the most positive moments for you.
DM: I think the most positive moment, it's very selfish. We applied for a
Phi Beta Kappa Chapter at Skidmore. I think this was like 1970,
something like that, and I had gone to a university that didn't have a
Phi Beta Kappa Chapter and it had a chapter installed three or four
years after I graduated. And one of the nice things about having a
new chapter installed is the new institution can pick I think it's five
alumni to induct into their Phi Beta Kappa Chapter and Stetson did
that for me.
So when we were looking at Phi Beta Kappa at Skidmore, one of the
criteria is how many of your faculty have Phi Beta Kappa keys. And
I was able to raise my hand. And that's small and impersonal. I think
some of the big stuff- I was very much in favor of the 4-1-4
curricular change but I didn't play much of a role. I was very much
in favor of the liberal studies curriculum because, here we were, as
an institution making a commitment to interdisciplinary approaches
to...the world is interdisciplinary as we experience it, and so forth.
When I first came here, and I had to make sure if I was dealing with
Jefferson, I wasn't poaching on the history department's turf or
something. And Harry Prosch never forgave me for having the
temerity to write about James and Dewey without being a
philosopher. Anyway.
LG: Dave, thank you so much. This has been fascinating. Bringing back
memories... Is there anything that you want to say that we haven't...
DM: Well, Skidmore... I think we all knew.... and at different stages in ourI spent off and on 35 years....I retired, I took early retirement when I

�was 55, went off and did other stuff and then I came back. And I
worked halftime for eight years as a fundraiser. And what I realized is
how special, how lucky we are. Yeah, God.
When Irwin was squiring me around the first day on campus, we
walked across, were out behind Father's Hall and Henry Gallant
comes out. How are you, and we chatted, and it was fun, and this is
my department chair this and Henry said, "When at Harvard, I did
this and that, we chatted." Henry went off and Irwin said that's my
department chair, I said "Yes, you both mentioned that," and he said,
“he can't go to football games." And he said, "He thinks those guys
down there in the huddle are talking about him." (laughs). You'll
have to edit some of this stuff out. (laughs)
LG: Dave, thank you so much for doing this.
DM: Well, there's so much more to talk about, but on the other hand, and I
didn't realize this until you-I thought Skidmore was the norm, because
it's all coming out of graduate school, I went straight from college to
graduate schools to Skidmore and I didn't know anything about... I took
the job as Provost at Rawlinson, got there in August and the President
told me my first assignment was to fire the athletic director. And I said,
"Well, why haven't you done that?" "Well, we were saving that for
you." "And have you already reached the decision that should happen?"
"Yes." I said, "Okay." He was a very, very nice guy and there was a
whole history of conflict with coaches and this and that. Anyway, so, I
took him out to lunch less and I said, "What would you like to do with
the rest of your life? You're a tenured faculty member and we need a
new athletic director, so I have been told." And he couldn't have been
nicer. He said, "Well, I'd like to do this and this and this." And I said,
"Well, let's do that. " Anyway, our weekly staff meetings are in the
president's staff and I'm taking notes furiously. The names don't mean
anything. The issues... So I'm taking notes. And about the third or
fourth staff meeting Pres. refers to something, and I go back and look at
my notes and it was directly opposite to what had been said at the
previous day. I looked up and the guy was the vice president for
development was looking at me, and he just went..... And I just went,
"Oh, shit."
But I was lucky with this one when I became Provost, the guy who was
the EP for business affairs here was a close friend of Joe Palamountain
and he was brilliant guy. He'd been a mathematics major at Syracuse,
Jim McCabe, and he was a vice president for research and marketing at
Merck before he came here, and he just took me under his wing. We
would have lunch once a week and he explained everything and Jim

�was a delightful guy in staff meetings. He never argued, and yes was,
"Well maybe we ought to try that!" No was "Well, I'm not so sure that's
a good idea." I was a faculty member, I was all, "God damn it, we
gotta do this, and that." I thought, "I want to grow to be just like that."
And it just wasn't in my nature.
LG: So a place of good colleagues.
DM: Mmm.
LG: Thank you.

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                    <text>Interview with Penny Jolly by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, January 17th, 2025.
LYNNE GELBER: It's January 17th, 2025, and I'm here with Sue Bender to interview Penny
Jolly.
SUE BENDER: Your name.
LG: This is Lynne Gelber. And Penny, why don't we start by asking you where you grew up and
a little bit about your background.
PENNY JOLLY: Well, I grew up in Larchmont/Mamaroneck, New York, which is part of the
suburbs of New York City. My dad was an American history teacher at the Mamaroneck
High School. So, I grew up in a very nice environment. I would have to say a good
school system. We lived in a small apartment. We didn't have a house, unfortunately. But
it was a very, very good childhood. And my parents would take me down to New York
City. I also had a sister, Susan. Or have a sister, Susan. And we would all go down to the
Museum of Natural History. And I remember saying to my dad, "No, no, I want to go to
the Museum of Natural History," on a day when he wanted to go the art museum, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. And I said, "No, no. I don't want to go see art. I want to go
to the Museum of Natural History, and I want to go see Egypt." And he said, "Oh, Egypt
is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art."
So that convinced me to go. And that was a formative visit, I have to say. I'm not sure
how old I was. I would guess 12, 11, something like that. But that was wonderful. And
then I started going to the Metropolitan Museum of Art when I would take the train down
into New York City, in high school and things like that. So that presaged my future.
LG: What was it about Egypt that drew you?
PJ: I'm not sure. I just think I found it so interesting. It was so different. And of course, there
were mummies. I was a kid. That certainly drew me in. But I have to say, what finally
drew me in even further was the Cloisters Museum, which is the medieval branch of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. My parents and I had tried to get there several times and, I
don't know, I don't know if we couldn't find parking or it was closed and we thought it
was open. There were several problems. And finally, my French, my AP French class,
when I was a senior in high school, was doing a trip there because we'd been reading
some medieval French writing, and I just loved the Cloisters. I just felt so at home in
those cavernous halls and the artwork and everything.
So, I remember when I was being interviewed to go to college, I went to Oberlin College,
he asked me, "Well, what are you really interested in?" I remember saying, "The ancient
classical world, ancient Egypt, medieval..." So, all this old stuff. And he was sort of
startled. He said, "People don't usually say that. That's an unusual answer." And sure
enough, I got into Oberlin and I couldn't believe it. They had a course in ancient
architecture. They had a course, two semesters of medieval sculpture. And I was in
heaven. So, I was headed on my pathway to become an art historian, clearly.

Page 1 of 17

�LG: Early on.
PJ: Yeah, and it was museums that did it.
LG: And then you went on for graduate work?
PJ: Yes. After graduating from Oberlin in 1969 with an art history major, honors in art history, I
went to the University of Pennsylvania. They had given me a full scholarship and I was
thrilled because at that point I was married and had a husband who needed to go to med
school. So that was the other thing. We had to balance off the big cities where both of us
got in with a reasonable amount of money or something. So, Penn was the clear place to
go and it was a good choice.
So, I went there and I got my master's and I got my PhD and I continued to work in
medieval and Renaissance art, as well as early Christian art. It was terrific. Grad school
always has its problems, so I probably won't mutter too much about them. Other than
things like, on Friday afternoons, the all-male faculty, which of course it was all male,
would go to this bar on the corner. I forget what it was called. And they would invite the
male students to go with them and we females were never invited. So, the males would
come out of the meeting calling everybody by their first names and we would be saying,
"Dr. Mynot, Dr. Watson." And they'd be Paul and stuff to them. So, I won't grouse about
that, but there was lots of gender stuff that was really irritating. On the other hand, I think
I finished my dissertation and got a job before anybody else.
LG: Where?
PJ: At Skidmore. Yeah. I applied for a variety of jobs and I actually had several offers. But
George and I... George came up with me to Saratoga Springs. We had to drive from
Philadelphia. And he came with me. Let me think for a second. Yeah. At that point, I was
pregnant.
LG: What year was this now?
PJ: Maybe … This would have been right after 1969... Oh, wait. For Skidmore, it would have
been 1976. 1976, right, I started at Skidmore. So anyway, he came with me to the
interview just to see what was going on and help with the driving and stuff. We had a
daughter already at that point, and so he took care of her while I was doing the whole
interview process. And when we finished the interview, we just looked at each other and
said, yeah, this is the kind of environment we wanted. A Liberal Arts college, not a big
bustling city university. We loved the idea that the Adirondacks are there. We loved the
idea of bringing children up in a town like this. And I never thought I'd live on a street
like this with interesting, different, lovely houses lined up with a yard. We were able to
buy a house, and I think that was not because of my salary which was nothing. $11,000
was my salary at that point. But I think the promise of him being a doctor, the bank was
very happy to finance our mortgage. I'm sure if he hadn't been a doctor, they never would
have, because we had no money, or very little money at that point.

Page 2 of 17

�So, George was done with his residency, internship and residency, and it was a perfect
moment for us to come. And we both have loved living in Saratoga Springs. Yeah. Been
a great place. And Skidmore's been a great place.
LG: So, when you first came, what were you teaching?
PJ: Do you mean in terms of courses?
LG: Yes.
PJ: Let's see. My first semester, I taught Romanesque Gothic art. Art and architecture. No.
Maybe I started with Early Christian. Well, it's hard to know. One semester or the other.
Otherwise, it was Byzantine, Early Christian art. I think it was Byzantine and Early
Christian art. And I was teaching the Survey of Art History, where we shared giving the
lectures over two semesters, and then had six discussion groups, three each semester. And
then I was teaching, I think, a Renaissance course. It was a lot. I'd never taught any of
those courses, except, I had participated in a survey with other people. So, there was a lot
of prep that year.
LG: Was the art history department a separate department at that point?
PJ: No. And that was certainly a point of friction for us, the art historians. We were the Art
Department, but that included about, I'd say, 16 tenure lines in studio art, plus quite a few
part-timers, and included five art historians. So, we felt very outvoted about things. Our
department meetings were all about studio art. Everything was about studio art. So, there
were hostilities, but on the other hand, they were very good friends too, among the art
people, and some wonderful artists who were good to see.
But that was a struggle for a number of years, and we finally, gosh, I don't remember
what year it was, but we finally were able to establish our own Department of Art
History, separate from the Department of Art. We got a name change. First, it was the
Department of Art and Art History. So, we had that for a while as a compromise: but then
we really got to be our own department.
LG: And who was the chair at the time?
PJ: When I came, it was Earl Pardon and then it was Peter Baruzzi. And that took up quite a few
of the early years.
LG: And as a separate art history department, who was the chair?
PJ: The first chair was Katie Hauser. I was Director of Art History. That was another thing, a job
they established back when we were complaining about things and still all together. So, I
was Director of Art History for nine years or something, which was very chair-like, but
not with all the authority of the chair.

Page 3 of 17

�LG: So, what were the responsibilities?
PJ: Well, setting up the schedule, dealing with students, giving permissions, running hiring. It
was a lot of the tasks of the chair, but I wasn't the one who went to the dean, necessarily,
and said, "We want to hire so-and-so," and negotiate a salary. The chair negotiated the
salary and stuff.
LG: Were you the one who reached out to other groups outside of the department to work with
them?
PJ: I think I really did a lot in that sense. My colleagues in art history tended to be, I wouldn't say
exactly a shyer bunch, but they stuck to their own stuff a lot more. And that's not a 100%
true. But I was interested in reaching out to the other medievalists, the other people who
taught Renaissance courses. For a while we were interested in setting up a Renaissance
studies program. And that eventually did not happen, but that was, again, an
interdisciplinary reach. Right from the beginning, I was involved in LS, liberal studies
program. Not the initialLG: With your own course, or?
PJ: In several ways. I wasn't in the summer group that I believe basically put LS1 and the LS
program together, but I joined them in the fall. So I was on the committee that was
creating LS, and then I taught in LS1 for quite a few years. I also had an LS2 course on
Italy. Art and Italy, Art and Culture in Italy. I don't remember what I called it. And then,
later, I had other LS courses about gender in the Renaissance and different things. So, I
was very supportive. I was the first chair... When we had a committee, an LS committee,
I was on it and I was the first chair of it. So that was a lot of engagement.
LG: So as an LS participant, liberal studies participant, you had your own section, discussion
section, plus youPJ: Yes. We had two, at least. Maybe even three.
LG: You individually?
PJ: Yeah. Yeah, I think two discussion groups.
LG: And then you would be a lecturer for the general?
PJ: Not everybody got to lecture, but I did. In fact, a number of years, I did two lectures. One on
history because I guess we didn't have a historian, or the historian didn't want to do it or
something. So, I did a lecture about history. I did another one about art... Creativity, I
think it was called. I think every year I taught in it, I gave at least one lecture. Now, the
lectures were big. You did it twice and you had half of the incoming class in each time.
So those were in the theater. Those were held in the theater. So that was always a little

Page 4 of 17

�daunting. But I had already been lecturing to the art history survey, which at that point
had 125 people in it. So, I wasn't totally put off by a larger audience.
Can I say, the best thing about LS was meeting weekly with the faculty. It was fabulous. I
knew about Freud, for example, but I don't think I'd ever really read Freud in, well, I'm
not reading him in German, but in the English translation, the real text. And so there I
am. I'm reading Freud and I'm learning so much more.
LG: And who was it that was presenting Freud?
PJ: Oh, gosh. Terry Diggory, maybe. I'm not sure.
SB: Sheldon?
PJ: Well, Sheldon gave a wonderful lecture about personality and things, but I don't think he
talked much about... Maybe he talked about Freud. I'm sorry. But in any case, it was great
hearing the other faculty lecturers doing the readings. And when it came to a topic like
Freud, where I didn't feel I knew all that much, I'm doing all this extra reading on Freud.
So, I learned an enormous amount from doing LS1. And I also learned lecture techniques
because I'd noticed something that worked really, really well, and I'd try to think, "Okay,
I could do that."
LG: Like what, for example?
PJ: I don't know. Maybe... Boy, that's tough to remember. Probably the person, actually, who
influenced me the most was not in LS. It was James Kettlewell. And he was just willing
to really give information out, give details. He was really full of interesting information.
But I can't say I remember what, but I remember observing people. Maybe noticing more
what doesn't work. It was a terrific learning experience.
And let's see. If I came in '76... Is that right? I'm trying to think when we started the LS
program. Yeah. It was right about then. Well, I was there right at the beginning of LS.
SB: Early '80s. Early '80s.
PJ: Okay, early '80s.
SB: Yeah.
PJ: Okay. That makes sense to me. I'd been at Skidmore a few years, but I don't think I was
tenured or anything yet. I really enjoyed my fellow faculty. And of course, I got to know
people in other departments, whom I otherwise would not have. I think that was probably
the greatest value of LS, liberal studies.
And then, of course, the courses were interdisciplinary, which was great as far as I was
concerned. Because when you're looking at images, at paintings, and sculpture, and
structures, buildings, the context matters so much. The patron matters, the historical time
period, the cultural sense of the time, all of those things feed into the work. And so

Page 5 of 17

�having courses that encouraged me to round out the edges of my courses was great. And
again, it affected everything I was teaching, not just the LS courses.
LG: What role did the Tang play in your area?
PJ: That was great. And again, I was on the Tang, I don't know if it was a taskforce or whatever.
I was on the committee that created the Tang. So, there we are again. Long meetings.
Endless meetings.
LG: With whom? Do you remember?
PJ: Tad Kuroda led them. Terry Diggory, wonderful Terry, was a super source for everybody in
LS. Sheldon maybe was right there from the beginning. I think he probably was. Sheldon
Solomon. That's, for the moment, what I'm remembering. Jim Kehl in English was very
early a supporter of LS.
SB: Now we're talking Tang.
PJ: Tang. Oh, God. I'm sorry.
SB: Yeah.
PJ: So that was Tad Kuroda. That was Terry also. I'm sorry. So anyway, we had meetings and we
ended up hiring. And we ended up, really, setting up the architect... Interviewing
architects. We had to decide on that, what kind of things we wanted in the building. It
was a lot of very interesting work. But those of us who were museum people, who were...
[inaudible 00:18:39] now. Who were museum people, we were very engaged with
the Tang. And then, I think it added enormously to our classes, our courses. In my parts
for the survey of art history, I would try to engage the Tang. And there were some really
neat ways. Boy, that dates me, doesn't it? Neat. There were some really neat ways that
one could make use of contemporary art from the Tang, even when talking about
medieval art or Renaissance art or something like that.
LG: Did you bring your classes to the Tang to view and discuss the art?
PJ: Oh, yeah. Yeah. And then... Exactly. And we would sometimes tour the shows together or
have the curator tour the show with us. And we decided to do our discussion groups at the
Tang. There were two classrooms there, one of which was a smaller seminar size. So, we
began doing that, again, just to get the students into the Tang and hope that they didn't
feel like, "Oh, that's on the other side of campus. We don't go way over there." So, they
had to come there at least once a week. Our lectures remained over in Gannett or in
Emerson.
But yeah, students made good use. And of course, we began having internships, having
students do their work, study at the Tang. There were fellowships that were established

Page 6 of 17

�for students working at the Tang. So, it was a great opportunity for those interested in
museum work. And quite a few of our students have gone on in museum work.
LG: Were you involved in the hiring of the early director?
PJ: John Weber. I think I was. I can't remember how directly, but we did a lot of interviewing of
architects and people. I think we interviewed the directors as well. That was a big job, but
what a wonderful addition for Skidmore to have the Tang.
LG: Did you serve on any college committees?
PJ: I think I served on just about every college committee at least once, if not more. Yes. In
terms of... Do you want to know special ones, or?
LG: Yes. Things that made an impact on you.
PJ: Yeah. Well, I think the one that was the most satisfying has to have been CAPT. Working on
CAPTLG: Appointments, promotion, and tenure.
PJ: Yes, thank you.
LG: And sabbaticals.
PJ: And sabbaticals too, at that point. It really allowed you to admire your incoming faculty
when you saw what they were publishing, what they were doing, what their backgrounds
were, as people came up for tenure. There were some very difficult decisions. I'm still
haunted. Just the other day I was thinking about this. I'm still haunted by my vote on one
decision where I probably should have gone the other way. But maybe that's the only one
I feel that way about.
But our work was taken so seriously by the people on the committee, as well as by the
administration. You really felt like you were part of the important things going on.
Should we give this person tenure? Should this person be rehired? How do we resolve
this problem? How do we talk to the dean about this or that? And it was wonderful. And I
was chair for a year, and that was tremendously satisfying. Really satisfying. It was the
year we first had 21 people up or 18 people up. It was an enormous number, so I worked
out a system of how we would do it, and it worked really well. I don't know if CAPT still
uses my system, but... I think CAPT has changed a lot over the years. But I felt very
proud of my ability to lead people in a way that I thought was fair and to negotiate with
the Dean of Faculty about things. So that was interesting. But committees like CAFR
were important.
SB: Academic freedom.

Page 7 of 17

�PJ: Academic freedom, sorry. Committee on Academic Freedom &amp; Rights. I was most always on
the library committee, because my office was in the library, so I felt I had a really vested
interest in knowing what the library was doing. That was a great committee. It almost
never met. But with the LS1 committee work and everything, I was always, always doing
committee work.
LG: Penny, I'm curious to know what kinds of changes over the course of your tenure did you
perceive?
PJ: I think for me, the biggest change I feel is the relationship of the faculty to the faculty, and
the faculty to the administration.
LG: For example?
PJ: Well, I know this just sounds like rosy-eyed nostalgia, but honestly, when I first came and for
those first, at least, I don't know, 15, 20 years, I don't want to use the word family
because that's just too trite-sounding here, but we were a cooperative group looking at
similar goals.
LG: You're talking about faculty?
PJ: Faculty.
LG: Faculty.
PJ: Yes, talking about the faculty here. We were comfortable, mostly, with each other. I mean,
there were always some wingnuts, shall I say. But on the whole, we knew people in other
departments. You'd serve on a committee and you'd meet the new psychology professor.
You'd meet the art professor you didn't know real well. You'd spend time with them. And
you would work together on those committees. We would have faculty meetings and
largely people came to them, I think. I don't remember it being empty. It was really very
crowded. And then we'd have a reception afterword with good food and good wine, and
people would stay for it.
Now, I know people say today, "Well, I have children. The child center closes at 5:00."
And my thought is, "Yeah, I didn't even have a child center," a daycare center. In fact,
that was part of women's studies. We started it and I was one of the co-chairs a couple of
years in a row, where we really worked on establishing the daycare center.
LG: With whom did you work on that?
PJ: I'm sorry?
LG: With whom did you work on that?

Page 8 of 17

�PJ: Fran Hoffmann was the leader. She was number one on that. Susan Kress, Mary Lynn. Those
of us particularly who had children, really. We didn't have the advantage of it, but we
really wanted to. And of course, that's another whole thing, it’s that I had a baby on day
three of my first year teaching at Skidmore in September of '76. And that's another one.
I mean, if I can segue into that and I'll come back to changes, but this is a change too. I
had various medical problems when I was in grad school and I was basically told, "If you
ever want to have children, you better start now." So, we were trying to have a child for a
number of years and finally became pregnant. And, of course, it was just when I was job
searching and interviewing. And sure enough, I finally did get pregnant, and Joe, Joseph
Howell Jolly, was born September 17th, 1976.
Well, the semester started, that was a Friday, started on Wednesday the 13th. And this
was my first job. I had multiple classes to teach. When I went to the chair of my
department, he looked at me and saw me very pregnant and laughed. And just looked me
up and down and laughed. He had no suggestions for me about anything. So, I talked a
little bit to... Probably to James Kettlewell, maybe Joan Sigfried, Harry Gaugh. I don't
know. I at least let them all know I was pregnant.
And nobody had any suggestions for me. Nobody said anything like, "Why don't you take
a few days off." Or, "I'll cover your discussion groups for you." Or, "It's okay to cancel a
class. Let the students know and you can make it up later." Nobody gave me any
suggestion of what to do. And I remember saying, "Well, my husband is going to stay
home. He's a doctor. He'll stay home and take care of the newborn baby during the day,
so that will take care of it."
And that is what George did. He had a gruesome schedule where he taught 12... Rather,
he worked in emergency room 12 hours overnight, a 12-hour shift during the week, and
then two 12-hour shifts on the weekend when I was home. So, he was working at the
emergency room while I was teaching. And we were both zonked and exhausted, but we
survived.
But I remember just nobody being any help whatsoever. And it just so amazed me, in my
department, the women I heard from were in English. Susan Kress, Mary Lynn in
American studies. All those people were saying, "How are you doing?" The secretary of
the Art Department, when she said there was a meeting that next Friday, so Joe would
have been a week old, and I said to her, "I am so tired. I just don't know I can come." And
she said, "You go home. You get some time in bed. You don't need to come to the faculty
meeting."
LG: And who was this?
PJ: It wasn't Denise Hughs yet. Oh, who was it? I can't think right now. At any rate, that was so
nice of her. So, I went home. She told me to go home. That it was all right. But see, I
didn't know it was all right to miss the faculty meeting, and I needed people to say I could
have canceled a class. I didn't. I think I put one class off until the next day, and it was a
small class and the students were able to do it the next day. And that was a great help. It

Page 9 of 17

�was an evening class. By that time, I just needed to get into bed. So yeah, I had a crummy
schedule. That was 6:30 to 8:00 o'clock or something. So, we did it the next day.
But that was weird. But my larger experience at Skidmore was that people were really
helpful. And it was people in other departments than my own department, quite honestly.
James Kettlewell was a dear, a sweetheart, and would have done really anything I asked.
But he was so involved in so many things and so scattered, it was hard to ask him to do
things. Although, he did dig my car out one day from the snow, which I totally
appreciated. It was totally kind of him to do that.
But back to the question about changes. It felt more like a family. People communicated
with each other. They talked with each other. We didn't have e-mail, so we talked. We'd
pick up the phone if we needed to talk to someone. Maybe that's one of the big, big
differences. It felt we had a common purpose. We cared about the students. We wanted to
do things well. We talked about difficulties. The women's studies group was absolutely
wonderful. I couldn't join it at first because I had this newborn baby and barely had a...
And an older child. My daughter, Jenny, was five at that point and she was going to
kindergarten for half a day. So, there was a lot of negotiation of home care, and George,
and then other people, and stuff.
But women's studies, when I had enough time to finally meet at the meetings, was just
great. They were so supportive. We talked about real things like childcare. So, I became
very involved with women's studies. They were just wonderful. And there were some
men involved. I also did the Writing Across the Curriculum program. And again, I got to
know people in the English department, Phil... What's his name? Phil...
LG: Boshoff?
SB: Boshoff?
PJ: Boshoff. Thank you. He was running that. And a wonderful woman... Well, in any case,
Susan Kress was involved again, Phyllis Roth, all those great leaders, later leaders or
current. Well, not current today, but leaders in their own departments and in women's
studies, those great people.
LG: What about the relationship with the administration?
PJ: It seemed to me much friendlier, much more open, much more that you could go and talk to
people. And they'd be there after the faculty meeting. So, you could walk up to the
president. There were receptions.
LG: And who was the president at the time?
PJ: When I came, it was Joe Palamountain. And when he saw me pregnant at the opening of my
first semester, he also looked me up and down and rather laughed. And I thought,
"Great." But any rate, but he accepted me. It was fine.

Page 10 of 17

�Oh, and by the way, Joe was born later that afternoon on Friday. Another funny part of
that story is that at the end of class, the second or third discussion group, one of the
students said to me, "Professor, can I come and talk to you about some things?" And I
looked at my watch and I said, "I can't. I have to go to the hospital now. My husband's
picking me up because I'm going to have my baby." And I did. I had it at 5:10 that
afternoon. I was teaching until 12:00, noon. So, it was all pretty crazy, but George was
pretty supportive and that meant everything, so... Anyway.
LG: Can you talk a little bit about your experience with the development of women's studies as a
curricular program?
PJ: Oh, yeah. It took some doing with the curriculum committee, although we women had
infiltrated a lot of these organizations. The dean was supportive. That was Eric Weller.
So, I remember him in general being supportive of women's studies. But there were
others on campus who were less so, for sure. And we wanted things like, I think this was
now into the '80s, things like gender-free language in the reports of the board of trustees
and all official documents and things. And we got some pushback from various faculty in
different departments that that was silly, we didn't need to do that. But we got it through.
At this point, if you were the director or co-director of women's studies, you didn't get
any time off, or any kind of credit or anything. It was very, very frustrating. But
eventually, we got a position of the, probably Director of Women's Studies, I guess it
was. And we hired Mary Stange as the first director, I think. Yeah, I think she was the
first.
So, we were in pretty good shape with the administration, I would say. And that helped a
lot. We began teaching courses. We realized we had to have an intro, 101-kind of course
for Women's Studies. And we put that together and we had to twist department chair's
arms to let so-and-so free to teach that course, because then they weren't teaching their
sociology or whatever course. Sociologists were very supportive. And it was a great
department. Psychology was real supportive. History. Languages even.
So, we had people who were really interested and really the program began to grow. And
we got good students and good enrollments. And we established a lecture series, the
Coburn Lecture series. We really became a real department, a real presence.
LG: And that lecture series was meant to do what?
PJ: To publicly have lectures about gender issues. I remember a wonderful one talking about
medicine and gender issues. About how all the research on heart attacks and on this and
on that and on that were done on male studies. There were no women included in the
studies. And they began to realize, "Wow. There are women too." And women needed to
be in the heart attack studies as well, because their experiences could be a little different.
I don't remember who gave that lecture, but it really was eye-opening. I thought it was
terrific.
LG: Now, you mentioned that at first it felt like a family.

Page 11 of 17

�PJ: Yeah.
LG: How did it evolve?
PJ: It's evolved in the last, maybe, I don't know, 20 years, 15 years, where it seems to me the
faculty are just really disgruntled. I think morale is low and it wasn't quite so low back in
the earlier days. I think they just feel disgruntled about maybe salaries. Although salaries
have taken some improvement, thank heavens. About time. They don't want to stay.
People don't want to be at meetings. I mean, the committee meetings used to be at 5:00
o'clock, 5:30. It wasn't easy for any of us, but that's when we had time to do committee
meetings. Or maybe at 8:00 o'clock. And I don't know. People began just complaining
and say they couldn't do that or they wouldn't do that. How are you going to get a
committee of eight people together in the middle of the afternoon or the middle of the
day? So, I see faculty as disgruntled.
LG: Did this involve separation from administration in some way?
PJ: Well, we had a wonderful, wonderful president, David Porter. Who was followed by a
president that was not at all well-liked and really had some problems. I was on CAPT during that
person and it was not good.
LG: And that person was?
PJ: Jamienne Studley. Yeah. So, there was real issues with her. I don't recall how long she
stayed. Five years, maybe? Four years? I don't know. But she finally did leave and that
was to the better. But again, we got in a chair, rather a president, I don't know. I have
mixed feelings about him, John Berman. Maybe okay.
SB: Dean.
PJ: Oh, he was dean of faculty. I'm sorry. Yes, we needed a new dean. Who came after Jamie?
Who was next?
SB: Phil.
LG: Phil.
PJ: Phil. Okay.
LG: Phil. Phil Glotzbach.
PJ: Phil. And I think he settled things down in a lot of ways, which was good, which was helpful.
That's right, I was on CAPT and we hired Phil, as I think about it. Right?
But I think they're more disgruntled. I think there's more busywork. I think there's a
ridiculous amount of busywork. And that seems to be true in the world at large. Filling

Page 12 of 17

�out papers and doing things. E-mail. I have such mixed feelings about e-mail. It was great
to handle certain things with students via e-mail. Absolutely fabulous. It really opened us
up. I mean, when I came to Skidmore, what you could do would be mimeograph a note.
And by the way, in our department when I came, studio art was still on the old campus
downtown and that's where the secretary was. So, if the art historians needed something
from the secretary, we had to drive downtown or bicycle downtown, and then come back
up to campus. It was so nice when... Oh, what department was it? Math, I think. I think it
was Mark who... Well, someone in math said to me, "You can use our mimeo machine
when you need to mimeograph something for the faculty. You don't have to drive
downtown to use the art department mimeograph." I mean, that was likeLG: You had to have a card or something? Or something special to use it?
PJ: No, it was just in the secretary's office. Yeah. It was just controlled. So, I began doing my
committee mimeos and student mimeos and things. Turning those out in the math
department, thank heavens.
So, any rate, they were... I don't know. The administration just didn't feel as close to us.
It didn't feel that we were as united as we used to be. But I largely feel it was the faculty
that changed. And they were disgruntled, and it's true our salaries were low.
LG: Penny, what have you been doing since you retired and what year did you retire?
PJ: Okay. I retired in spring.
LG: Okay. Some more of your highlights?
PJ: Oh, there's a bunch of them. Let me just start by saying, I really enjoyed all my years, 42 or
43 years, whatever it was. Yes, because I resigned, or I retired in 2019. The spring
semester, 2019. So that was 43 years. I really enjoyed it on the whole of the students. I
loved preparing lectures. I love preparing classes and discussion groups. I really enjoyed
it.
So, on the one hand I have to say, the job was a highlight. But more specifically, I think
there were several things that really stand out. For instance, back to women's studies,
which was so important for me in so many ways. I'm very proud of the daycare center
being set up. Now, I was not the primary mover. Fran Hoffmann really was the person
who worked more on that than anyone else. But I was involved in supporting that,
involved in getting it established. I worked on it with her and others. And that was just
such a wonderful addition to Skidmore. And for all of us older faculty who'd had kids and
had not had the pleasure of a daycare center, this felt enormous.
I think another enormous highlight has to do with the Tang. John Weber really wanted
the faculty to be curating interdisciplinary exhibits. And I went to him after one of our
meetings [inaudible 00:43:34] [about exhibits] where he was asking for these and saying
he needed them. And I said, "I've been thinking a lot about hair in the Renaissance lately.

Page 13 of 17

�The meaning of hair. What do you think about hair as a topic?" And he practically hit the
ceiling in joy. He was just really excited. John was a great guy, John Weber.
And so, I began thinking more about it and thinking, "This would really be fun." And I'm
not always a team player. I like control. I think the idea from John would have been that I
would have multiple people working with me on the show. Someone from biology, the
biology of hair. And someone from, I don't know, whatever. But I didn't really want that.
I wanted to be in charge. I wanted my show.
So, I began working on it and showing John what I had, and it really was coming
together. They began putting in the loan requests and all the things. And I feel like that
was very successful. I also was adamant that I wanted the catalog to be at the show's
opening. I think it is still the only show the Tang has put on where the catalog was
available when the show was available. I just said, "I want these essays."
So, I also edited a book of essays for the Tang. I wrote, I think, I don't know, four or five
of them, but then I did involve people from other parts of the college in writing essays.
So, there's some really nice ones there. Gerry Erchak, Amelia... In my own department,
Amelia... Not Rosner. Well, I'm sorry, Amelia. I'm blanking on your last name right now.
But several people who wrote really terrific essays, Susan Walzer, and things. And I
think that show was a great success. I still have people coming up to me and saying,
"Aren't you the person who did that hair show at the Tang?" And I still get e-mails from
people asking me questions about hair. I still get e-mails asking me to do an interview
about hair. So that's hung on, shall we say. And that was the Tang and that was great.
I think another highlight was when I was awarded the Moseley lecture for my research,
which is a special named lecture at Skidmore. I pulled together materials and I felt like
that lecture was, in some ways, the best lecture I've ever given. It really was interesting,
and I heard some great comments from people whom I respect. And I did go on to
publish pieces of it and then more of it.
LG: And what was the topic?
PJ: The, and this is in quotes, "pregnant" end quote, Mary Magdalene. It's about Mary
Magdalene the saint, the Christian saint, being symbolically pregnant, not physically
pregnant by Christ, as some have claimed. The Dan Brown suggestions. But rather, she
was spiritually pregnant. She was infused by the Word of God, by God, similar in a way
to Mary, but did not give birth to anything other than grace and positive ideas. So, I was
very proud to do that lecture and I was super pleased at how well it went.
LG: Penny, you've been very active in the community and at Skidmore with other retirees since
you've retired.
PJ: Yes.
LG: Tell us about that, if you will.

Page 14 of 17

�PJ: That's been really very nice of them to keep asking me to give lectures. I've been very happy
doing those. It's fun to think about topics. So, we've been doing online lectures...
LG: For retirees?
PJ: For retirees, for the retiree group. And most recently, I gave a tour of an exhibition I have
curated up at the Hyde Collection in Glens Falls. And that's been my biggest activity
since I retired. Of course, retirement is broken into by the pandemic, and travel plans
were missed and getting to museums was missed and all kinds of things were slowed
down. This exhibit should have been done earlier, but it was held up for a whole bunch of
reasons.
In any case, it opened this fall and just closed January 5th. This is an exhibition about
childhood in Italy, 1400 to 1500. It's called Growing Up in Renaissance Italy, Childhood
in Italy 14... I must have the title wrong. I can't believe it. Growing Up in Renaissance
Italy. I don't know, any rate, Childhood From 1400 to 1600. It was a terrific topic to work
on. It's a topic of interest to a huge number of scholars right now, huge amount of
scholarship on childhood in Italy, specifically in Florence also, which was my focus.
So, I just had the fun of reading all kinds of things I hadn't read before, from history and
anthropology and different areas, about childhood. It was really a terrific thing to work
on. And then putting it up this fall, having it all come to fruition, I've also heard really
positive feedback from a number of people about it. So, I've been very pleased. And it
really kept me busy all fall because I gave so many tours of the exhibition. I was over
there a lot, but I couldn't go for the de-installing. I thought, "I'll be just too sad, seeing
them take everything down and crate it up." So, I avoided that this past week.
LG: Anything else we should add that we haven't asked you about?
PJ: Travel. One of the great things of my job is, I really had to travel. I had to go to Italy. I had to
go to Belgium, Netherlands, France, England, Germany, Spain, all these great places.
Because it was so important to see and experience the things you talk about. So,
Skidmore has been very supportive of that. I have to say, the faculty research grants
helped enormously with all that.
LG: Those were the faculty research grants while you were still an active faculty member or as a
retiree?
PJ: When I was active. And I also have gotten a couple of them since I retired, which has been
very generous of Skidmore.
LG: From the... That's thePJ: The retirementLG: ...retiree group-

Page 15 of 17

�PJ: ...group. Right.
LG: ...that has funded you.
PJ: Yes. Right. And that's for faculty and staff can be funded. So, they funded some of my travel
when I was working on the show and some other elements. So that was terrific.
LG: Those grants don't come from the College. Those come from the Retiree Initiative Planning
Group.
PJ: Okay. Have to hear more about that at some point. Again, I don't know. That was support
from Skidmore. I do remember once going into Eric, because on a sabbaticalLG: Eric Weller?
PJ: Eric Weller, Dean of Faculty. And I was taking a long and very expensive trip, and I asked
him was there any chance he could give me more money, because I really needed to do
this for the, I don't know, the book or something I was working on. And he did. I mean,
he gave me a chunk of change. Which was really incredibly helpful at the time. My
husband and I had divorced, and so my income was dramatically different. That was very
helpful. And my second husband, Jay Rogoff, has been wonderful because he's been able
to take time to travel with me. George almost never could, because of his job. But Jay is
great in helping.
LG: Anything else we should cover? Well, I want to thank you ever so much for participating in
this project.
PJ: You're most welcome, Lynne and Sue, most welcome. Wish you luck with it.

Page 16 of 17

�Page 17 of 17

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                    <text>Interview with Michael Arnush by Lynne Gelber &amp; Sue Bender (recording tech),
Skidmore College Retiree Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, July 17,
2025.
LYNNE GELBER: This is LG. I'm here with Sue Bender. It's the 17th of July 2025, and we're
here to interview Michael Arnush. And Michael, why don't you start by telling us a little
bit about where you grew up and some of your childhood and what brought you to
Skidmore.
MICHAEL ARNUSH: Sure. Thanks a lot. Thank you, both of you, for having me here to do this.
So I was born in New York City and spent half my childhood in Queens and Jackson
Heights. And at the age of nine, my family was uprooted and we moved to Phoenix,
Arizona, which was one heck of a cultural shock for all four of us. My father worked for
Revlon, and Revlon decided to build a plant in Phoenix in the mid-sixties, so here was a
New York family suddenly living in Phoenix.
So I was there through high school. I focused largely on math and science in high school.
I seemed to have some skill with that. So when I went to college, my plan was to be a
pre-med, like so many students. And I did every pre-med class except the last one. And
the last one was physical chemistry, the last one that was required for med school. I went
the first dayLG: And where was this?
MA: At Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. I went the first day of class, and it was the
last day I went to class. I had no idea why I was there any longer. So Stanford was on the
quarter system, so that was fall quarter of my junior year.
LG: What year was that?
MA: '75... Fall of '77. So at this point, I should have a major, I should be well into the major, and
I suddenly have nothing. So winter quarter, I just took courses across the board. I took a
course in women's studies, a course in religious studies. I took Intro to sociology, Intro to
anthropology, Intro to physical anthropology. I was searching.
And I had a friend who is Greek American, she's still a friend all these years later, and
she suggested to me, why don't you take a course in Greek history? So I went to the first
day of class. I knew no one in the classroom. It was a tiered classroom, like a small
version of Davis or Emerson at Skidmore.
LG: Do you remember who was teaching it?
MA: Dr. Antony Raubitschek, who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s, then went to the Institute of
Advanced Study at Princeton, and then ended up at Stanford. Four foot eight tall, four
foot eight wide, thick German accent, and I was hooked the first day, the first five
minutes.

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Page 1 of 17

�And then I scrambled. I scrambled to try to get the classics education I needed to go on to
go to a graduate school. So I squeezed in enough in that junior and senior year, and in the
summer in between, to get into graduate school. But I knew I needed to work more on my
languages, on Greek and Latin.
I had an opportunity to go to Greece the summer after my senior year. I'll never forget the
moment. I got on a bus at the old airport down by the water on the outskirts of Athens.
And as the bus descended from this high road into the city, I caught glimpses of the
Parthenon in between people's arms that they were holding on the straps,.. hooked, just
completely hooked.
I spent a fifth year doing Greek and Latin. The classics department let me audit Greek
and Latin classes. And then I went to graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia. And when I went on the job market the first year, I was very ABD, all but
dissertation. And I ended up with a one-year sabbatical replacement at Dickinson College
in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which was a phenomenal experience. They taught me how to
teach. The people in that department were just so kind to me.
And then I went on the job market again, still ABD, and it came down to Skidmore and
one other school. I interviewed with the dean of the faculty, Eric Weller, because Lynne,
as you know, you were in the foreign language department, at that moment, classics had
had a roller coaster relationship with the college and with the department. There had been
a number of classicists before I was hired who, for one reason or another, had not
succeeded.
So I interviewed with Eric and then interviewed on campus, and I made the offer, and I
chose it over Bowdoin. I thought that being a little closer to New York City might be a
better option for us. And so I started Skidmore in the fall of '89 and retired a year ago.
LG: So you came to Skidmore in '89, and what was your first position? What were you doing
and what department were you in?
MA: Okay. Well, I was hired as the director of classical studies, and I was still ABD, so I didn't
have my dissertation in hand, which means that your department, Lynne, then called the
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, was taking a gamble on me because I
did not yet have my PhD.
LG: I never took a gamble.
MA: Well, thank you, Lynne. Some people certainly did. So I was hired to direct a program that
had had a real life through the seventies and eighties from people like Helga Doblin, who
taught Greek on the side when she was told by Sonya Karsen that she wasn't allowed to.
To the Ecclesia, which was this gathering of non-classicists. Plus, if there was a classicist
in the department, that person would be part of it.

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Page 2 of 17

�I did lectures, got an NEH grant, fostered the study of antiquity. There was someone in
the history department, Bill Brynteson, someone in art history, Harry Gaugh, Tom Lewis
in English, Phil West in English, and a bunch of other people who believed that the
delivery of a classics curriculum was of value, but the college had not made the kind of
investment it needed to really build the program.
And probably the hiring of David Porter in the second half of the eighties made a
difference. He was my second to last interview when I came in the spring of '89. Scared
the dickens out of me. I had never met a college president before.
So I was hired as the director of a program. There was one other person who was
teaching part-time.
LG: Who was that?
MA: Michael Moore. And the idea was to build a classics program from ground zero. I
discovered, among other things, that the students who were in intermediate Latin knew
no Latin. So I had to teach intermediate Latin students elementary Latin and cram it into
as few weeks as possible.
Within, oh, I don't know, maybe four years, there were three of us, including my wife,
Leslie Mechem. I did not hire her. Phyllis Roth, the dean, hired her. Within, oh, 12 years
there were, at one point there were five of us. There are now four classicists at Skidmore.
LG: Who are they?
MA: Currently, Ben Abbott is the ancient historian. Janelle Sadarananda is the archaeologist.
Amy Oh is primarily a Latinist, but also a Hellenist. And Dan Curley, who is the
department chair, focused on Ovid, but now works primarily on the reception of classics
in film.
So we started from nothing, and that was quite a challenge, not only to build the
resources from the college, but to demonstrate the need for those resources, which means
getting students into the classroom. The easy classes were things like Greek art, Roman
art, Greek history, Roman history, Greek philosophy. That has been offered by someone
in the philosophy department for longer than I've been at the college. Classical
mythology, a big draw. But getting students into Greek and Latin, even with a language
requirement, was a real challenge.
LG: So when you first came, what courses did you teach?
MA: I did not teach any ancient history. So my degree is actually in ancient history. I was trained
in Greek and Roman history, but the history department hadLG: Is that Bill Brynteson?

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Page 3 of 17

�MA: That was Bill Brynteson who was a Renaissance historian, but he had been teaching Greek
and Roman history for years. He taught it as intellectual history, so I knew that was off
limits. When Leslie was first hired, and she's an archeologist, Harry Gaugh was still
teaching ancient art for the art history department, so that wasn't available to him either.
So I focused primarily on just teaching Greek and Latin, just getting those languages off
the ground and getting students into the sequence and holding onto them.
LG: Was that because Helga also was retired or hadMA: Helga retired nine years before I arrived. So she retired in '80, and she was a great resource
initially. I mean, she was very kind to me, but she was also hands-off. She was done. She
was finished with the college.
So yeah, when Bill Brynteson retired, the history department offered me the opportunity
to teach, frankly, as many ancient history courses as I wanted. So I took over and
revamped that sequence and turned it into a four-course sequence, two on Greek history,
two on Roman history, and then a bunch of seminars over the years.
LG: So this became a full-blown department at some point.
MA: Less for Phyllis Roth. So I was recommended for tenure in, what would that be, ‘94? And
Phyllis and I, at that point, would have lunches. So many people did once a semester,
over Kendall-Jackson wine at Sperry's. And I had run afoul with Phyllis. I got to tell this
story. This is like '90, and you'll remember this. You both will. This is, oh, probably '92.
So David Porter is the president of the college. Phyllis Roth, English department, is the
dean of the faculty, and they needed to cut the budget. And this is years after David had
commissioned something from all the Commission on the Nineties, and they wanted to
cut the budget. And the theory, and I never asked Phyllis or David to assert that this is
true, the theory is that they were looking for the quickest way to cut as large a number of
faculty as possible. And the language department had grown, and you know better than I,
Lynne, from something like seven lines to 16 lines in a very short period after the faculty
approved an intermediate competency language requirement. And so the notion is get rid
of the requirement. You can get rid of a lot of faculty really quickly and close the budget.
So John Anzalone, retired professor of French, who's a dear friendLG: Was he the chair at that point?
MA: No, I don't think he was. You had been. Maybe John was chair at that point because he was
chair when I stood for tenure. So we put together some data to demonstrate the value of a
language requirement. And we knew that secretly David Porter, who knew more
languages than I do, believed in the teaching and learning of languages. And for all I
know, Phyllis did as well, but this was an expedient, I think, way for them to take care of
the budget.
So John and I put together a PowerPoint before there was a PowerPoint and a handout
that was printed out and in color, which was given to every person who came to the

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�faculty meeting. It was like 200 copies. John gave the prologue. I ran the faculty through
the data. John did the epilogue.
I'll never forget. I'm doing the data and it's time to turn to page two. So I said to the
assembled, "Please turn over to page two." You couldn't hear anything except the turning
of a page. It was amazing. Faculty voted to retain the requirement.
Phyllis was pissed. She called John and me into her office the following week. Now, I'm
untenured. I think I'd gotten my PhD maybe a year or two before. I'm untenured, John is
my chair. We staged a coup. We defeated the Dean and the President, and you don't do
that lightly. She calls us into her office and reads us the riot act, and John is taking the
brunt of her criticism.
20 minutes in, John announces, "I have to leave. I have to go pick up Becca from school."
Now I'm sitting alone with the Dean of the Faculty. And for about the next, it seemed like
hours, probably another 15, 20 minutes, I caught Phyllis's wrath. To her credit, in my
10th year, she gave us the department. Phyllis did not hold a grudge. She gave us an
additional line, so we grew from two people to three people.
LG: Why do you think that it became a separate department?
MA: I think there were a lot of reasons. One, I think for some faculty they had to approve it, of
course. For some faculty from their own home institutions when they were
undergraduates or graduates, it was customary to have a classics or classical studies
department.
I think for the language department, I was an anomaly because I really was an historian in
a language department. And that's not unusual for classics at some small institutions
where the institution doesn't create a department, but the classicists are housed in a
language department. But typically if they're historians, they're housed in the history
department. It was unusual for Skidmore to have someone trained as an historian, but
teaching the languages, because I was also trained in the languages, to be housed in the
department.
So I think there was no opposition, really, from the language department for us to go our
separate way. There was nothing, I think, politically positive or negative about it in terms
of the relationship of those of us in classics to the department. It didn't cost the college
much more money. We continued to share an administrative assistant as the Classics
Department does today, so there was really no additional cost. Phyllis granted the line
before, yes, before classics became a department.
Lynne, you tell me. You were there.
LG: Well, I didn't see it quite in the same way, obviously, because I think so many of the survey
courses really were in the languages or in the literature, part of it, history of, so it wasn't
so strange to have somebody in history doing Latin or Greek.

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Page 5 of 17

�MA: And an archaeologist, right? So it was not an unusual fit, but it felt like we were ready to
have independence to be able to make our own decisions about especially personnel.
LG: So what other major contributions do you think you made at Skidmore?
MA: A menu of items. Let me first talk about just for classics. So I think Leslie and I were the
first faculty to do a study abroad program with students during the summer for two weeks
abroad. Before the current director of Off-Campus Study and Exchange, OCSE, which
many just call Study Abroad, but it's OCSE, before the current director, Cori Filson, was
in the position, there was someone else who was there, who was hired by John Ramsey,
who was the Dean of Studies. And Jon used to oversee Study Abroad. And that first
director, her name was Kara Sheldon, approved for us to take students to Greece for two
weeks.
And that became a standard. Leslie and I, over the course of however many years that
was, took students four or five times in the summer. We took alums once in '98, including
a couple of future board of trustee chairs, Sue Thomas and Janet Whitman. And we took
faculty, not from Skidmore. We had a grant from something called the Associated
Colleges of the South and took about 20 faculty to Greece as well. So that became a
standard.
Now the Classics Department takes students either to Rome, that's Dan Curley in classics
and Greg Spinner in religious studies, or to Greece,- Amy Oh and Janelle Sadarananda,
every other year, so it's now become a regular feature of the curriculum. And that's great.
That's really wonderful. It's wonderful for the students to get the field experience.
I stepped out of classics. I still kept a foot in the department. I was chair more than once.
When we became a department, it was no longer program director. It was chair. The first
thing I was asked to do was the Honors Forum. So John Ramsey, bless his soul.
A quick story about John. My very first day on campus, there was a reception after the
first day of orientation for new faculty, and it was out on the patio outside the old
Scribner Library. John probably had come to the orientation, so we probably had
recognized each other. He came over and introduced himself. We chatted for a few
moments, and then he said, "Would you like to meet former President Joe
Palamountain?" I said, "I'd be delighted." I had met David during the interview.
He takes me over to the tree below the president's office outside of Palamountain, points
to the plaque in the ground and says, "Joe's six feet under." I have told that to every
president because almost none of them, including the current president, Marc Conner,
knew that Joe's ashes are down there. Anne's are not. Anne's buried, I think, in the family
plot, Connecticut, something like that. But yeah, there's Joe Palamountain.
LG: Oh, dear.
MA: So John Ramsey, as the Dean of Studies, and John, as you both will recall, was involved in
so many different things in support of the administration and a close ally of Phyllis'. So

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�John reported to the faculty that retention of first-year students had become increasingly
problematic and that they wanted retention to be someplace in the 90s, 93, 94, 95%, if
possible, and it slipped to 89%. And his concern was that students were transferring after
the first year.
LG: Because?
MA: The report was, and this is anecdotal, the report was that students did not feel they were
sufficiently challenged. Now, I don't know what that means. The Skidmore faculty are
rigorous, probably always have been, probably are more rigorous today than when you
arrived or when I arrived. But that was at least what John reported to us.
So he proposed to the faculty something called the Honors Forum. Sue, you were
involved with it very early on. You were a great ally in that. The faculty approved it. The
idea was to offer courses that any student could take, but they would be designated as
Honors Forum courses, and the idea was that they would be a bit more rigorous. They
would raise the bar. And the theory was that by raising the bar in certain courses seeded
across the curriculum, a rising tide would lift all boats. That's John's phrase. And so after
the faculty approved it, I think Phyllis asked me to be the director.
LG: And that was what year?
MA: '97, maybe.
LG: Okay.
MA: I think that's about right. And so the first challenge was to build an Honors Forum
curriculum. And so I think the first thing I did with John was to build an Honors Forum
council. So there was a collection of faculty, administrators and staff that included res
life, included John's area, included other areas, and some faculty who eventually were
elected through the governance system to build a program.
And so that took a couple of years to get off the ground. And I'm thrilled that here we are,
well, almost 30 years later, the program still exists. It's gone through a lot of changes. I
think it's still trying to figure out what its role is at the college.
LG: What did that consist of when you started?
MA: Initially, we invited entering students to join the Honors Forum. That eventually shifted
under subsequent directors to wait until students arrived on campus and give them a
chance to apply. We did both initially, invite entering students and offer students the
chance to apply after a semester. Initially, there was a course only for the entering class,
Sue, Jon Ramsey and I team-taught that class. It had mixed results, but it was fun. It was
a lot of fun.
And then recruiting faculty to offer courses in their areas. So these were not courses that
were designed necessarily to be different from the curriculum, but to be more rigorous.
And so that meant, for me, reaching out to every department chair and program director,

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�making announcements on the floor of the faculty, inviting faculty to workshops. We had
a little seed money from the Dean's office to build a curriculum.
In the early stages, not only did we have the course for the entering students, but when
we had a senior class, John and I team-taught a course open to the seniors in the Honors
Forum.
LG: Which was what?
MA: It was to give them a chance to reflect on their academic experience. If they're doing a
thesis or an art project or some other kind of senior lab project, to share that with the
group. Again, it was a mixed bag. It was an experiment. We were looking to find the
footing for how the Honors Forum would work.
So that was the first. Want to hear about the next one?
LG: Yep.
MA: That was really hard. So now it's, I think it's maybe 2004. Chuck Joseph, professor of
music, is the VPAA/DOF. Sue, I don't recall if you were associateSUE BENDER: VP?
MA: I'm sorry, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty. And at that point,
the position had been consolidated, yet again, into one person. Sue, were you still
Associate Dean of the Faculty at this point in '04?
SB: No.
MA: Okay. So, as we all know, faculty had been delivering the liberal studies curriculum for a
long, long time, developed in the mid-eighties. I think Terry Diggory was on the
Committee on Educational Policy and Planning (CEPP) when it was first proposed.
An LS, Liberal Studies, program consisted of LS 1, Liberal Studies 1, and then three
groups of courses, LS 2, LS 3 and LS 4, each of which were themed. And faculty offered
courses in LS 2, 3 or 4, or taught as part of the team-teaching effort in LS 1.
Wildly successful probably for its first 10 to 15 years. Eventually, faculty started to drift
away from LS 2, 3, and 4, so those were consolidated into LS 2. LS 1 continued, and I
remember... Oh, I know. It was Sarah Goodwin, professor of English was Associate
Dean, and she was struggling to get faculty to teach LS 1, this jewel of a class, teamtaught by 40-something faculty who met weekly to discuss the curriculum, to plan events,
and then various faculty would come in and give lectures. You did that. I never taught in
LS 1, but I did observe David Porter teaching LS 1, teaching prepared piano, which was a
hoot.
So the dean's office was saying, we can't deliver this course any longer. And even the
new LS 2 was becoming increasingly difficult to deliver. So the faculty had, I don't know

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�how long it lasted, probably most of the year, a discussion about the curriculum and what
to do.
In the end, the faculty approved something called the first year experience, the FYE. It
wasn't that controversial, but you can appreciate that those who taught in LS 1 for a long
time, and still taught, especially the LS 1 course, were resentful that was being taken
away. And so we knew, all of us, that it was going to be a landmine to get things off the
ground.
Chuck Joseph, VPAA/DOF, asked me if I would direct the program. And then Chris
McGill, who at the time was working in the dean's office, would join me as the
administrative arm, and I would do the faculty arm. And here the task was to recruit
sufficient faculty to offer 45 to 48, we called them Scribner Seminars after Lucy, the
founder, because everything is named Skidmore and nothing was named Scribner except
the library, 45 to 48 seminars every fall, plus two in London. So the continuation of the
London program, but now it would be two faculty, two Skidmore each teaching one
Scribner seminar. And we needed to get 135 courses on the books pretty quickly because
we needed to plan the next three years.
Phil Glotzbach had just become president. Mellon Foundation likes to support new
presidents, so the Mellon Foundation gave Phil $250,000, which he handed over to the
FYE and gave us $100,000 out of his presidential discretionary funds. So we had
$350,000.
Chris and I were throwing money at the faculty offering workshops, summer, spring,
winter, whenever we could, to help faculty develop courses. Then we had to vet the
courses. Then they had to go to the curriculum committee. This was a haul.
By the second year that I was director, and this would probably be around 2005 or
so, which means 20 years ago, we offered the first slate of courses. We're still doing it.
The courses were meant to be a couple of things. Number one, interdisciplinary at the
heart of the Skidmore academic experience.
Two, taught by faculty in their disciplines, but to teach whatever they wanted to give
them the freedom with few constraints, except the course was supposed to be rigorous,
include a good amount of writing, interdisciplinary, but we tried not to tell the faculty
what to teach. We tried to kick themSB: So what kinds of courses came out of that?
MA: Oh, my gosh, pick your favorite discipline. I can talk about my own classes. I remember I
used to have to speak to, or I was asked to speak to prospective Skidmore students and
accepted Skidmore students. And I would go through the litany of courses on the cosmos,
to courses on poetry, to courses on immigration, to courses on history. Pick your favorite
time period and the location.

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�Tillman Nechtman, in the history department, still does this. He teaches a Skidmore
seminar on Captain Cook's voyages, and each student is assigned a role on Captain
Cook's ship. I mean, it's so cool. And when the weather is good, he teaches it down by the
pond, which always seems appropriate. So it was like that. It adds a spirit of fun and
adventure.
Some faculty taught it every three years, which was really the goal. We wanted, ideally,
for the tenure line faculty to teach it, not to ask new faculty to teach it right away, to give
them a couple of years to get their feet wet and figure themselves out as a member of
their department and program and the faculty, but try to have a course on the books
before they stand for tenure. We welcomed non-tenure track faculty as long as they were
full-time.
My goal had been a first year experience, and we failed in that regard. It really has been a
first semester experience. When Muriel Poston, the Professor of Biology, came to
Skidmore from outside and became the Dean of the Faculty under Chuck Joseph, who
then became VPAA, and then Susan Kress English department replaced Chuck, I went to
Muriel and asked for the resources to develop a spring experience for the students.
John Anzalone and I team-taught one course, and that was the extent of it. We teamtaught a course on the Grateful Dead. We got away with teaching a course on the
Grateful Dead, and then finished the course with a concert in Albany by the Grateful
Dead. But Muriel said, we just don't have the money to even do a one-credit course for
the spring. It would've cost about $50,000 a year. I think we could have found the money,
but we didn't have the will.
So it continues to this day. Faculty teach Scribner Seminars, and maybe it'll continue to
last longer, I don't know. But it really is a first semester experience.
LG: So what would you consider your biggest challenge in all the years that youMA: Well, something I haven't mentioned, and that was serving on committees. I served on the
Committee on Educational Policy and Planning a couple of times, set up and chaired it a
couple of times. That's always hard because it brings together the Dean of the Faculty
and/or the Vice President for Academic Affairs, maybe in the same person, a bunch of
elected faculty, some administrators trying to plan the future of the curricular experience
of the college. Always a challenge.
I always wanted to serve on CAPT, the Committee on Appointments, Promotions and
Tenure. It went by CAPTS, with an S at the end, before I came to the college.
LG: It was sabbaticals.
MA: Oh, it was sabbaticals. Okay. It had to be approved by the faculty, a faculty of six elected in
staggered terms. I knew it was a responsibility to serve on it. I just wanted to wait for the
right moment, and it ended up coming towards the end of my time as a faculty member.
So I was elected to CAPT. And in my first year, we had a couple of real serious
challenges and some very difficult tenure cases, promotion cases. And as well, that was

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�the year that we, as a committee, in consultation with the faculty, broke the committee in
two and created ATC, the Appointments and Tenure Committee, and separately the PC,
the Promotions Committee. And so that happened my second year on what was CAPT,
now ATC. And then I served one more year on ATC as its chair.
It's the hardest work I ever did at the college. You're reading the scholarship, the teaching
and the evaluation of your colleagues. You're reading amazing work. You read
everything. If the colleague has written a book, you read the book. If the colleague has
written 37 articles as a psychologist, you read 37 articles. You read every student
evaluation. It's a lot of work. It's a serious commitment that the faculty take very
seriously. I loved it. It was some of the hardest work I ever did. Really challenging.
At the end of that, for a couple of reasons, I was looking at retirement. It was coming up
pretty soon. Leslie was looking at retirement after one more year. I was going to stay two
years past her time on the faculty, and I got an opportunity to join the Dean of Faculty's
Office as an Associate Dean of the Faculty for student academic affairs.
I said, yes, the first week of March of 2020. The second week of March, the country and
the world shut down due to COVID. So one of the greatest challenges was the summer of
2020, working with Michael Orr, dean of the faculty and VPAA, Janet Casey, Associate
Dean of the Faculty for Academic Affairs, and Pat Fehling, Associate Dean of the
Faculty for Academic Affairs and Infrastructure, figuring out what to do.
From the academic side, do we have a college? Will students come in the fall? Will the
faculty teach in the fall? Will we be teaching outside, inside, remotely? All of us who
were teaching in the spring of 2020 were given an extra week to learn Zoom. No one
knew Zoom.
So that first summer, that first year, working with, not just the dean's office, but the
president's office, the registrar's office, the study abroad office, which had to bring every
student home from abroad in the spring of 2020, academic advising, counseling center,
health services, the whole gamut of the college working together to figure out how to
manage this and how to keep the college afloat. And we did it. And I give tremendous
credit to so many people.
Great leadership from Michael Orr, DOF/EPAA, but heavy lifting by Pat and Janet and
so many folks in Starbuck, so many folks in student affairs. And my three years in that
job, I got a chance to work with people I never really had a chance to work with before.
Everyone in Starbuck, so registrar's office, academic advising, study abroad, career
services, the folks downstairs under Jamin Totino in supporting students in and outside
the classroom.
Working with a lot of folks in student affairs and res life, and that was a great experience.
I got to see the other side. Many faculty might have a brief experience on a committee
with colleagues in other parts of the college, but rarely get to work with them so
intensely, and I got that opportunity, and that was great.
LG: So would you mark that as among your fondest memories?

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�MA: Yeah, I would. I would say meeting John Ramsey and meeting Joe Palamountain my first
day at the college. I would say the language requirement issues with Phyllis, that was a
highlight.
Phyllis's retirement was also a hoot. I don't know if you remember this, but we did a skit.
Shame on us. Jon Ramsey in a wig played Phyllis, and I sat on his knee, and I was Jon
Ramsey. That was a good one.
Highlights, the holiday party, which used to fall in December. It was the last day, the last
Friday of the semester, last Friday maybe before exams or maybe of exams. And I just
remember the year I was recommended for tenure fell on that day as well, David Porter
on the stage in his red and green Christmas vest. Those were great fun. I really enjoyed
those.
And I haven't talked about something else, but I can't not talk about it, and that's the
classroom. I spent almost all of my 35 years, one way or another, in the classroom,
department chair, program director, Honors Forum, FYE. And my last semesterLG: What FYE is?
MA: First Year Experience, Honors Forum. And then my last year as an Associate Dean of the
Faculty, Michael gave me room to teach one course in the spring. I taught a lot of classes.
I love to teach. I still miss that part of the job a lot. I tried to be innovative. I think I built
the first academic web page at the college. I know I taught the first team-taught online
course that wasn't part of UWW. I taught with a colleague at Miami University.
LG: University, well, that was UWW?
MA: Right, UWW. But I didn't teach in that. I taught with this colleague I met at a conference.
We team-taught a course on ancient Athens. She was in Ohio, and I was at Skidmore in
the library. And we used rudimentary computer hookups and a speakerphone, which
never worked, and it crashed almost every time. I brought a lot of role-playing into my
classes, and I enjoyed that. I also liked the rigor of reading ancient Greek with students,
reading ancient Latin with students, of teaching a seminar on the Medea by Euripides or a
seminar on powerful women in the ancient world. I love doing that, and I miss that.
LG: So what have you been doing since you retired, and what year was that that you retired due
to changes at the college?
SB: Michael, could you talk a little bit about some of the things that you were (changed)MA: Oh, changes at the college? Oh, sure. Across the board, the physical nature of the college. I,
of course, wasn't here when the college moved from downtown Saratoga Springs to the
current location on campus. But the addition of, first, the Dana wing that was urged by
Phyllis Roth, Dean of the Faculty, and David Porter, college president. Which eventually
led to the CIS, the Center for Integrated Sciences, dedicated in honor of Billie Tisch, a

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�long-standing supporter, she and her family of the college, a spectacular building for
teaching and for scholarship and for research. That whole part of the college has changed.
The building of Zankel, the music center with a glorious hall that holds over 600 people,
fantastic acoustics and great places for students to work on their musical skills. Housing
for students has changed so much. I think the college still needs more spaces and needs
more classrooms, but housing has improved a lot. Now there's a new space for health and
wellness, the Wagman Center. That's great.
LG: How has the housing for students changed?
MA: Tore down housing that used to be devoted to juniors and built apartments for them that are
really first class. And then there's a second set of apartments in North Woods that are for
seniors. I toured all of that when I became the first-year experience director. I wanted to
see what the student experience was like because we had hoped to link some seminars to
the housing experience, and we did that for a couple of years.
I think the faculty are more rigorous, more diverse in what they offer, more diverse as to
who they are and where they come from and what their backgrounds are.
The student body is certainly much more diverse. I remember early on, David Porter was
still president, Phyllis Roth was the dean, and a student I'd had, his name is Scott, was a
senior, a Black male student. And it's a faculty meeting Friday afternoon, Gannett
Auditorium, and Scott and a bunch of students, students of color, people of color walk
into the room and ask if they can take the microphone.
LG: And what year was this? Do you remember?
MA: No, I don't.
LG: Okay.
MA: But it had to be before '98, when David stepped down. David graciously allowed Scott to
interrupt the meeting, and Scott's comments were both a plea and an urging. He
essentially said to the president, look around the room at the faculty. Almost everyone is
white. You need to diversify the faculty. Now years later, the college has done a pretty
good job of doing that. And the student body is much more diverse, both in terms of
having people of color in the student body, international students as well, but also from
more diverse socioeconomic backgrounds.
I think at one point Skidmore was viewed by other institutions, people at other
institutions, maybe people outside of the academy as a finishing school. It's no longer an
institution like that at all.
When I came, maybe it was in the top 50 of liberal arts colleges by the dubious rankings
of things like US News and World Report. Now it's in the mid-thirties every year. Maybe
it'll go higher. I'm not sure how important that is, but it’s certainly, parents do look at it.
High school students looking at college do look at it. I think it's not insignificant.

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�Everyone wants to downplay it, but it's important. The college has risen in the estimation
of others.
LG: So what have you been doing since retirement?
MA: So in 2017, there was a scholar by the name of el-Abbadi. I forget his first name at the
moment. So el-Abbadi was an Egyptian scholar. His obituary appeared in The New York
Times. He wrote what was, at the time, the definitive study of the ancient Library of
Alexandria in Egypt, published by UNESCO, which I thought was an odd publisher for a
scholarly study. And I read it with interest because the story went as follows.
The Egyptian government decided to build a brand new library in the city of Alexandria,
glass and steel, high-tech, not necessarily with books on the shelves, but to be a digital
hub. el-Abbadi was old school, and believed in having books on the shelves. And so they
had a parting of the ways, and so he was not involved ultimately in the planning of the
library.
LG: And this library was where?
MA: In Alexandria, in Egypt. And when the grand opening was held, he was not invited, but
they handed out copies of his book to everybody who came to the grand opening,
including the president of Egypt. I thought there's a story there.
I put it away. And then in my last spring in the dean's office, which would be, would that
be '23, I guess spring of 2023, I went back to it thinking about what I'm going to do in
retirement. And I thought, well, I'm going to tell his story. And I reread the obituary, and
I remembered that he has a surviving daughter, a homeopathic physician in Germany, and
a surviving son who is a professor of mathematics in California. I thought I can't write
anything without their approval.
That got me onto the Library of Alexandria, which got me onto the ancient philosopher,
Hypatia, and I decided to write a novel. So for the last two years I've been working on a
novel. Today is Thursday. On Monday, I met with the writer, courtesy of the summer
Writers Institute with the help of Bob Boyers in the English department, Marc
Woodworth in the English department, and Adam Braver, who is the co-director of the
Writers Institute. They put me in touch with a writer who lives in Florida who's working
on her second novel. I sent her my 300-page manuscript about a month or so ago. She
read it with great care and gave me an hour and a half phenomenal feedback. So now I
need to go back and make some changes. AndLG: And what are you going to call this?
MA: Well, right now it's called the Tattered Satchel. We'll see if the title holds, but she seemed
to think it works. It's a story of two women, Hypatia, this ancient philosopher,
mathematician, teacher, the daughter of a philosopher, scholar, editor of texts whose

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�editions of the texts of Euclid and others survive to this day. She was murdered by a
Christian mob in Alexandria in 415 CE.
But the other half of the novel is about a liberal arts college professor, by the name of
Margaret, who is going to be standing for tenure. So it's two very different stories and
eventually their stories, not their lives, but their stories intersect. Margaret turns to
Hypatia to help her get tenure, but she does so in a way that would be called devious, if
nothing else, deceitful, unethical, and amoral. So that's what I'm working on.
LG: It sounds fantastic.
MA: It's been fun. I never thought I could write a novel.
LG: Did you have to get an agent?
MA: That's next. When I'm done with this version, I still want to show it to a couple of people, I
gave it, for example, to Steve Stern who used to teach in the English department at
Skidmore. Acclaimed novelist, I think has written 16 novels. He read it about a year and
a half ago. He was enormously helpful in helping me think about... Because I'm no
novelist. I'm an historian, so he really helped me think about the tools that you need to
write a novel.
I shared a reading with Sue and Leslie and some other friends. I've had a couple of other
people read it. Leslie has read it a couple of times. I think it's better. I don't know that it
rises to the level of something that ought to be published. I hope it will be. We'll find out.
LG: Good luck.
MA: Thank you.
LG: Anything else we should cover?
MA: Just one small thing. It's not small. It was significant. It was the morning of 9/11, and my
office was in Ladd Hall, which is attached to the center of campus, the Student Union
Case Center. And I was walking to the library, to library 203 where I was teaching a
Latin class. That was the very beginning of the fall semester.
And there used to be a TV downstairs in the spa, the cafeteria. And so the TV was on,
and I saw a friend and colleague, Reg Lilly, in the philosophy department standing in
front of the TV. Now I happen to know that Reg is a basketball fan and a Chicago Bulls
fan, and I happened to know that that day Michael Jordan was announcing he was leaving
Major League Baseball and coming back to basketball. I had a few minutes. I thought I'd
go grab a cup of coffee, say hi to Reg, and go to class.

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�I saw the aftermath of the first plane hitting the World Trade Center. I went to my class,
and I told the students what had happened. I asked them if they want to cancel class, and
they said, no, please teach. And so we stayed together for, it was probably 80 minutes.
And when I left the library, I ran to a bunch of librarians. They were hearing various
rumors. They heard the State Department had been hit. They heard that the White House
had been hit. We didn't know yet the full extent. At that point, the second tower had been
hit, and I ran into Pat Oles back in Case Center. Pat, at the time, was the Dean of
Students. I'll never forget this. He had a stack of paper printed out with the names of
every student who had a parent or family member who worked in the World Trade
Center. We lost no parent or family member. We did lose one alumnus whose name is
commemorated on a plaque outside of a classroom in I think on the first floor of Bolton
Hall.
LG: And who was that, do you remember?
MA: I forget his name, but he's there. But I remember the students and how they responded later
in the day. So we went back to the department not knowing what to do. And one of the
students said, let's go give blood. So a bunch of classics faculty and a bunch of our
students who are majors who used to hang out and I think really wanted to be with
somebody, we drove downtown. I forget exactly where it was, but it was in one of the
buildings that used to be part of Skidmore. And we got in line and offered to give blood
and they said, we're overwhelmed. We can't take anymore. But I just remember how the
students responded. So I'll never forget that moment. However awful it was, the students'
desire to contribute. It says something about our students.
LG: Good. Anything else that you want to include?
MA: No, that's it. Just, thank you. Thank you for doing this project. It's important, I think, for not
just the retirees who get a chance to talk about their experience at a place like Skidmore
College. But if anyone is listening, if anyone is reading the transcripts, and I hope they
are, to learn something about the place where they work or worked. I wish I had had this.
I've always wanted to write volume two of Mary Lynn's “Make No Small Plans”.
LG: Good.
MA: But my volume two was not going to be what Mary wrote. It was going to be the scandals
of Skidmore. I just don't think I have the nerve at this point to do it. I don't know that any
of these transcripts reveal any of the scandals. You would know better than I. But I think
someone needs to write that and circulate it anonymously.
LG: Okay. We'll wait for edition number two.
MA: Okay, deal. Thank you.
LG: Thank you, Michael.

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�MA: Thank you.
SB: Thanks, Michael.
LG: This has been wonderful.

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                    <text>Interviewee: Tim Brown
Years at Skidmore: 26 (1980-2006)
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: June 22, 2023
00:00:00 Header
00:00:33 Born/raised in Keene, NH; undergraduate in math and played basketball, baseball and
soccer at Keene Teachers College; then taught math and coached at Keene High School. Then
attained Masters in Physical Ed and PhD in Biomechanics at Indiana U. Taught Biomechanics
and Research Methods in a graduation program at U of Delaware.
00:01:47 While at Delaware, learned of opening for Athletic Director and Chairman of Physical
Education and Dance; after connecting with Skidmore’s Nancy Davis at a convention, accepted
offer. Was also in charge of the Riding Program.
00:03:47 Bev Becker went on sabbatical but left great notes.
00:04:15 Job responsibility: to develop an intercollegiate athletic program.
00:04:22 Skidmore had gone co-ed in early 1970s, but by 1980 Skidmore still had mostly club
teams, with only a few varsity teams in women’s sports.
00:06:07 Louise Wise, Admissions Director, found “men were interested in a strong intermural
program and intercollegiate opportunity. The women were interested in health and fitness.”
00:06:45 In 1980 Skidmore had no space for it; had some equipment in a corner of a basketball
court. Hesitant to accept job because of this, but Palamountain confident about fund raising for it,
so Brown accepted. First year at Skidmore involved traveling and designing the center.
00:07:38 Wanted space for different activity areas including a pool, gyms, racquetball courts,
weights/resistance, exercise &amp; stretching area.
00:08:12 Polo was expensive. Coach was great, but we didn’t have the $ or facility, so reduced
it to a club program. It needed to be endowed. Downhill skiing also reduced to a club sport.
00:10:00 Brown’s “golf pro” reputation derived from research for National Golf Foundation.
00:10:48 “But really the time and energy went into developing all … the programs.”
00:11:02 Changes during tenure involved building the sports center and its 1990s addition, plus
development of faculty and staff.
00:11:45 Important to hire people who could coach varsity level and teach academic level. (Eg.
Jeff Segrave. Paul Arciero, Denise Smith, and new Athletic Director Gail Cummings-Danson.)
00:13:02 Challenges: budgets. Renting space for hockey, equipment for various sports
00:13:45 Many coaches then were part-time; Skidmore rented vans for travel — hard decisions
to make.
00:14:40 When started in 1980, Skidmore had 4 varsity teams: women’s tennis, women’s field
hockey, women’s basketball and women’s lacrosse.
00:15:00 Developed varsity schedule for other sports by joining associations.

�00:16:02 Became competitive at national level, winning some national championships.
00:16:10 Championships weren’t the goal, though. “I wanted a very good experience for a
student athlete,” rather than an “athletic student.” Goal: a higher ratio of students participating.
00:17:50 Skidmore doesn’t give athletic scholarships, so students come for academic priority.
00:18:14 We do recruit, sending letters to prospects, watching them play, interviewing,
developing rapport and assessing level of respect. More time and energy, but “healthier.”
00:20:22 A highlight: developing the Tim Brown Scholar Athlete Award with John Ramsey.
00:21:20 Another: watching people grow, staying in touch. Some outstanding faculty/staff: Paul
Arciero, Jeff Segrave.
00:21:54 Many outstanding students.
00:22:20 Another highlight: when Robert Spellman (student) asked me to read at his wedding.
00:23:08 Students went into careers that include professional golf, business, sales, finance.
00:24:22 Vision of role of athletics in a liberal arts institution: opportunity to compete against
self and others, and finding ways to get and keep in shape, make athletics part of regular routine.
00:26:33 New facility at Skidmore will provide enough space so no need to close parts for a
team’s use, or no need to wait for equipment; can better fit student and faculty schedules.
00:27:50 Retired in 2006. “I decided … I had to have a plan.” Plan included volunteering to run
fund raising golf tournaments, help with Skidmore Hall of Fame, volunteering as a rules official
for golf tournaments and youth programs in Florida.
00:28:50 Tasks when volunteering as a rules official: like an umpire, helping the kids know
their choices and guiding them through the decision.
00:30:35 Through 26 years at Skidmore, received some job offers, but “Carol and I thought,
‘How can you leave home?’ … Skidmore became home.”
00:31:15 Connected with other Skidmore chairs through retreats &amp; playing squash, golf, tennis.
00:32:03 Also played and connected with some Saratoga Springs people - helped with support.
00:32:24 Decided that no other offers were greener — “This was home. It still is.”
00:33:10 Had many bosses through the years, “Phyllis was in a class of her own.” “She always
seemed to be able to work out solutions to the most difficult problems. She was just a brilliant,
brilliant woman.”
00:35:63 “And then it influences your decisions. You start looking in a broader way of solving
problems, of coming up with solutions.”
00:36:18 END

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                    <text>Interview with Tim Brown by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, June 22, 2023.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber. It is June 22nd, 2023 and I’m here with Sue Bender to
interview Tim Brown. And welcome Tim.
TIM BROWN: Thank you.
LG: It’s really nice to see you back north.
TB: [laughs] Yes.
LG: Tim, let’s start out by having you tell us something about you - growing up, where you
grew up, and how you ended up coming to Skidmore.
TB: Perfect. I was born and raised in Keene, New Hampshire. I went to high school there. Went
to college. I wanted to be a teacher, I knew that from when I was younger, in junior high
school/high school, so I went to Keene Teachers College, which is now State — Keene
State College. And wanted to be a teacher-coach, as I said, so I was a math major; I
played basketball, baseball and soccer at Keene State. I’m in their Hall of Fame for
basketball and baseball. From Keene, I went right from Keene State to Keene High
School and I coached football, basketball and baseball and taught Math there. I was a
math major in undergrad. And some jobs came up. I wanted to coach as well as teach,
and jobs came up and I didn’t have my masters and I needed a degree in Physical
Education at a lot of the colleges and universities to be able to coach at their level, so I
went to Indiana University, got my Masters and Doctorate in, well Physical Education
Masters, Biomechanics Doctoral Degree. And from there went on to University of
Delaware and taught in a graduate program, Biomechanics and Research Methods. And
my secretary and boss, Dave Nelson, saw the job at Skidmore opened up, as Athletic
Director and Chairman of Physical Education and Dance; they thought it was perfect for
me. So, I was thinking about it and I sent a letter off to Skidmore. And I knew of
Skidmore because so many of the, our students at Keene High School went to Skidmore

�College, and they were all very bright, intelligent, wonderful people, so I thought, “What
a great place to be!” Interviewed with Eric Weller, Dave Marcell and Joe Palamountain.
And Bev Becker, as well. And it was a great interview.
LG: And Bev was the chair?
TB: Bev was chair at the time, correct. And she was looking for a sabbatical, and she went on
down to Duke, and did a wonderful, had a wonderful experience down at Duke.
LG: What year was that? Do you know?
TB: It was 1979 when I interviewed, I came in ’80. Actually, one of the big turning points was
at the Eastern District Convention for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.
Nancy Davis was there and she introduced herself; I didn’t know who Nancy was, didn’t
know she was there. And she said, “Would you like to have breakfast some morning?”
And I said, “Sure.” So we met at 7 o’clock the next morning and at about 10:30 when
they threw us out of the cafeteria where the convention was, she’d convinced me to make
a trip up to Skidmore. And one of my really good friends, who was Physical Education
Director at Geneseo, Myrt Merritt, was very good friends with Nancy. And the
connection was made, and … as you all know, once you come to Skidmore, it sells itself.
It was just tremendous. So, I took the job and never looked back.
LG: Good! So, you were hired to teach or to coach?
TB: I was hired as Chairman of the Department and to develop an intercollegiate athletic
program. I was Chairman of Physical Education and Dance and in charge of the Riding
Program as well.
LG: Is that the point at which Bev had just retired?
TB: No, she still stayed on. Matter of fact, she was a big help; [laughs] she left me a lot of great

�notes! I was supposed to start in September but I came up in June and she had had to
leave and there was still one person to be hired and so I started in June instead of
September. She came back the next year and taught in the department for a number, a few
years after that.
But again, the responsibility that I had was, ah, was to develop an intercollegiate athletic
program. I guess there were a number of schools that had gone co-ed at the same time, in
the early ’70s, and Skidmore evidently chose not to make any push — push or move —
to attract men. Joe Palamountain said, “Now we have the opportunity for men to get an
education at Skidmore College.” And they found out after that, Louise Wise did a study,
a survey, of the kids …
LG: And Louise Wise was, at the time was?
TB: Director of Admissions, yes. And a matter of fact, she even talked me into making a few
trips to Deerfield and Mount Hermon and Choate and so on to try to recruit students —
not specifically men, but uhh, we … so the job was to [clears throat], excuse me, to try to
develop a program. A lot of interest from the kids, but really no commitment to the
program. So, when I came in fall of ’80, we had like twenty-something club teams and no
varsity teams. I shouldn’t say no varsity teams because Jeff Segrave’s women’s tennis
team played a strong varsity schedule, Jane Misurelli’s field hockey and women’s
lacrosse programs had a strong program, and the women’s intercollegiate women’s
basketball had a, played a varsity schedule. But in reality, none of the men’s programs
really played a varsity schedule.
LG: Was that because there weren’t enough men?
TB: Not enough men, not enough commitment from the men students. They wanted to play but
they didn’t want to make the commitment that it took to be, you know, a commitment to
excellence.

�LG: And was this at a time when athletics were less important to students in general?
TB: Well, at Skidmore that’s the case, but not overall. The survey that Louise Wise did, found
out that the thing that was lacking in their four year experience — now there’ve been four
years of kids going through Skidmore, graduates that she had to survey, and she found
out that, number one, the men were interested in a strong intermural program and
intercollegiate opportunity. The women were interested in health and fitness. They
wanted an exercise center, they wanted space to be able to work out, and they didn’t have
either, so that’s when, they gave the information to Joe Palamountain and Joe
Palamountain said, “Well we need to build a sports center.” And that was part of it. Now
when I was offered the job, I was reluctant to take it because there was no space at all for
… for activity. There was a universal gym, fitness gym, in — IN the basketball court in
the corner, which was extremely dangerous when you are playing a basketball game or
intermurals. And I was reluctant about it and then Eric Weller called me up and said that,
you know the rule, policy at Skidmore at the time was you had to, to build something you
had to have 50% in hand and 50% in sight to build a building. And Joe Palamountain said
they had about 25 or 30%, and when I was balking a little bit Eric Weller called up and
said, “Joe Palamountain said to call and tell you that his vision is outstanding.” I said,
“What does that mean?” He says, “It means he has 25% committed but his vision, he can
see it coming, so we’re going to go with the project.” So, the first year here we spent
traveling around and designing the sports center.
LG: And what did you look for in the sports building?
TB: Uh, activity areas. Wanted to have a pool, gyms, some racquetball spaces, racquetball and
squash, because that was a big sport at the … at the liberal arts colleges in the northeast.
And, you know, an exercise area where you have, uh, do stretching, flexing, and weight
resistance activity.
LG: What was the link to polo at the time?

�TB: At the time the polo was through a student and he was pushing it hard and we had it in the
stables but it was, it was extremely costly. I mean the polo program as a club was costing
us as much as the rest of the club sports and varsity programs, and we, we didn’t have a
full-time coach, he was part-time, he lived a ways away.
LG: Who was that, do you know?
TB: Paul Kant. And he was a great guy, did a really wonderful job with the program, but it just
became too costly, so we made a choice … uh, I’m not really positive when this was, but
it was about the late, the late ’80s, where we evaluated every program, including the
programs that we knew were very successful like the women’s tennis and the field
hockey and lacrosse, and just decided that, number one, polo was too expensive, and we
didn’t have a facility, so we were going to reduce it to a club sport. We had skiing — we
only had downhill, we didn’t have cross country, so we couldn’t get into the bigger
meets, so we reduced that to a club sport, after making some of the others varsity, at that
time, about ’85 or ’86. So, it was a hard, difficult decision and, Dave Long was director
of, um, he was in charge of fund raising and many, many a meeting in his office with
people very interested in polo, and the bottom line is that nobody was willing to write the
check that would support the program. We really needed to endow it. We could not run it
year to year on, with it in the budget.
LG: Everybody at Skidmore knew you as “the golf pro.”
TB: laughs] Yeah.
LG: How did that happen? How did that come about?
TB: Well, my background in golf was really through research and pedagogy, because I did some
research for the National Golf Foundation on equipment and swing analysis, teaching
methods, and I would go to their … and lecture, and it was in my resume; my background

�was really in baseball. I expected to come and maybe start a baseball program, but two
students, Al Antonez and Steve Yale, saw me the first week I was here and explained
why it was important that we add a golf team that wasn’t just a club. So, I went to some
National Golf Foundation clinics and went to PGA schools in the summers, uh
developed, you know, a program that, as you say, I got to be known as the golf coach
rather than the Athletic Director, but really the time and energy went into developing all,
all the programs.
LG: So, in the course of your tenure at Skidmore, there’ve been a lot of changes in the program.
What were the highlights for you? What kinds of changes did you see?
TB: Well, the building of the sports center was huge. That was just unbelievable. And then the
addition that we did in the early ‘90s — mid-90s, that allowed us to expand our
intermural program and our weight room, those were huge. Uh, I think the development
of some of our faculty and staff was probably the biggest thing. I mean I think of some of
the people that we hired, uh, starting … you know Jeff Segrave was already here but he’s
a huge asset in everything that we did, in some of our hires, because we had to hire a
person that could coach at the varsity level but also teach at the academic level that
Skidmore was, had a reputation for. So, it was difficult to find the right people, but we
were able to. I mean I think of Paul Arciero right off. I mean his great expertise when he
came to us was as a tennis coach. He was an All-American tennis player from Central
Connecticut, he had a masters’ degree from University of Vermont in Nutrition and a
PhD from Springfield College in Exercise Science, Exercise Physiology. And when you
get people like that, it just kind of like, it’s exciting to look back at them and see Paul’s
giving lectures here, or writes a paper there, or Denise Smith writes a paper for, with the
firefighters, and so on. It was exciting. It’s been exciting to watch them, watch the
program grow. And I think that, the new Athletic Director, I think she’s doing a fabulous
job in what she’s able, doing. She’s really made some progress.
LG: And who is the new one?

�TB: Gail Cummings-Danson. She’s wonderful, she’s done a fabulous job. And I stay in touch
with her. She calls some, often, and we chat.
LG: So, what were the biggest challenges?
TB: Budgets. Budgets. I mean, we had a hockey team we had to rent space for because we
didn’t have a hockey rink. We had to find those moneys; equipment for hockey, lacrosse,
those sports are very, very expensive.
LG: And there’s still no hockey rink!
TB: No hockey rink still, but at least they have a space out there that — I was on the Rec
Commission in town when we built that rink and, uh, we have a designated locker room
and ice time, and so on. But, ah, yeah, we do not have a rink, and that, that’s a drawback
for the program, but … there are priorities, right? But budget was huge, I mean it was
just, I think about it, what we used to pay our personnel. As a result, a lot of our coaches
were part-time. And eventually moved them all to full time and now they have full time
assistants, but, at the time, just, the budgets were, … like I think of putting them in a van,
a 15-passenger van, and driving them up to Middlebury or over to Williams rather than
putting them on an upstate bus — those were the decisions that we had to make if we
wanted the programs, so, you weighed them, both sides, I mean it’s, it was — those were
hard decisions. Today they are in busses, and, you know they’re safe, safer traveling than
in a 15-passenger van.
SUE BENDER: Tim, could you describe the program that you had when you started and what
the full array of programs looked like by the time you left?
TB: Sure. Well, when I started, we really, as I mentioned, only had those four teams that really
played a varsity schedule, the rest were really club teams.

�SB: And the four teams were?
TB: Women’s tennis, women’s field hockey, women’s basketball and women’s lacrosse. So, we
really didn’t have any of the men’s teams that were playing, quote unquote, a varsity
schedule. So, we developed through joining associations, we joined the Mayflower
Conference, which is a New England conference, with similar schools in size but not in
academic, uh, [clears throat], excuse me. But, um…
LG: Who were some of the, what were some of the other schools?
TB: Franklin Pierce, Nathaniel Hawthorne, umm, Castleton, New England College, those were
some. Uh, Roger Williams. But it was, then it was also the NAIA, National Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics, out of Kansas City. We weren’t quite ready to develop a
program to compete at the NCAA level yet, but then a few … we were that, in the
Mayflower Conference and the NAIA for three or four years, then we joined the ECAC,
the Eastern College Athletic Conference, which is about 350 schools from Maine to
Virginia, Division 1, 2 and 3. And once we got into that level and were able to compete
we joined the NCAA and then we developed the programs through the years; uh, each
program has been very competitive at the NCAA level. And winning national
championships. Not that, I should put this in right away, national championship is not the
goal as I saw it in 1980 when I came. I wanted a very good experience for a student
athlete. A lot of schools that we see are really athletic students, right, like Ohio State,
Michigan and Florida, and so on. We really wanted to have the students have a real
positive experience. And in the mid ’80s I was on a panel. There were three Division 1
Athletic Directors, two Division 2 and one Division 3 — I was the Division 3 Athletic
Director. We each had 12 minutes to talk about our programs. And then went down, 1, 2
and 3, and they got to me at the end and I said, “You know, this is wonderful, a lot of
money that these programs have, but athletics at Skidmore College is much more
impactful on the campus than at Ohio State. We have about 400 of our 2000 students play
athletics. Do the percentage. Ohio State has about 400 and they have 60 thousand
students, so it’s, - the student body is involved with our program, all of them; they are

�participating in one, in one way or another, it seems.” It was, just, the numbers, to me,
played a bigger role. And, we tried, uh, we tried competing with some of the, uh,
NESCAC schools, like Williams, Amherst, Wesleyan, Hamilton and so on, and we
weren’t, facility wise, we weren’t up with them and budget-wise we weren’t. But we
slowly developed into those and we now have them on our schedule.
LG: Scholarships have often played a large role in college athletics.
TB: Right.
LG: What role does it play at Skidmore?
TB: None at all. We do not give scholarships. And again, that’s part of my philosophy on the
student athlete. They choose Skidmore as a student and then they can come to play the
sport that they are recruited for. Now, not to say that we’re not recruiting, heavily
recruiting kids, because for the golf team, I would try to recruit two or three kids a year to
have about twelve kids on the team, and we would probably send out 400 letters to
prospective students that we knew were possible … could get into Skidmore, number
one, and then could play at Skidmore. And that’s what all of the coaches are doing. When
you don’t have a scholarship to give, which I think is healthier than trying to buy a
student out of high school, um … it’s, uh, just takes a lot more energy and time and effort
to get them.
LG: So, you would visit the schools, when the students would play, and …
TB: We would uh, I would pretty much see their schedule, see when they’re playing, um, for the
golf we only saw them, really, in the summer, at times, at different tournaments, but the
other coaches would go and see them play basketball, hockey, soccer, whatever, during
the year, and … you know, try to develop a rapport with them. When I recruited kids and
we got down to the end, I always wanted the student to bring their parent or parents with
them to the interview. Because I wanted them in my office, sitting, talking, so we had a

�three-way conversation going, because I wanted to see the relationship between that
student and the parents. I wanted to see the respect and the love going back and forth,
because if it wasn’t going back and forth there, it was never going to happen between
player and coach. And there were some kids that that was the last time we, the last time
that we actively recruited them to come to Skidmore College. And a few times the parent
would call and say, “Well why haven’t you contacted my son?” “Well, because we’ve
filled the spots with other people” or whatever. I mean you wouldn’t want to really lie,
but we had filled the spots. But this student, this child, wasn’t going to fit in to our … our
philosophy.
LG: Ok, so, you’ve talked about some of the challenges, mostly budget [laughs], … but, what
about … the highlights? What stands out in your mind as…
TB: I think one of the things for me was when, John … he was in advising, academic advising.
He’s passed away, moved to California …
SB: Ramsey.
TB: John Ramsey came to my office one day and he said, “You know you keep preaching” and
this is the way he put it, “to me about their academics, yet you honor the outstanding
athlete.” So, we developed an award, with his help, called the Tim Brown ScholarAthlete Award. And we give one to the senior, the outstanding academic athletic senior,
every year, that award. That, to me, is just … that’s just rewarding to … to see something
like that. And as a retirement present, Jeff Segrave kind of spearheaded raising the funds
to support that, that award. So, yeah, I think that’s … that’s one of the big things. The
other is just watching the growth of these people, as they come to Skidmore and stay or
move on to other, other positions and jobs.
LG: Did they stay in touch?
TB: Yes. Yeah, they do.

�LG: Any outstanding people you’d like to mention?
TB: Paul Arciero is one that stands, and Jeff Segrave. I mean, when I came, Jeff was in his
second year at Skidmore and I had to do a reappointment and a tenure letter for him, and
review, and … he’s always been a very close friend.
LG: How about students? Any outstanding students?
TB: Uh yes, I mean there’s, um, I think Steve Cornell, Steve Yale, Scott Yale, Al Antonez,
Bobby Antonez … I think of these guys. Heather Mitchell, Pam Thompson … there are a
lot of great kids that, kind of, I’ve stayed in touch with for a long time; but I’ve been
retired 17 years now and it kind of, like, drifts apart.
LG: Where does the time go?
TB: I don’t know where it went. But I think another highlight was, I’ll never forget, I’ve been
nervous a lot of times in my life, but when Robert Spellman asked me to read at his
wedding, this piece, and I looked at it and he sent it to me with blown up print so I could
read it if I had to, … uh, I’ve never been so scared in my life to get in front of 200 people
in that church and read what he wanted me to say at the wedding. It was … but it’s
wonderful that I met … his children, have been part of our lives and he has for … ever
since.
LG: He was a student?
TB: Yes, he was a student, yeah.
LG: Do you remember what class?
TB: He was ’85, I think. ’85 or ’86. He was a business major and a golfer. He also played

�basketball. And a great supporter. He’s made a number of very significant donations to
the golf program through the years.
LG: So, what have most of your students gone on to do? Do you know?
TB: Oh boy, all kinds of things. I mean, I’ve had a number of my golfers go into professional
golf, obviously. Al Antonez is a club manager down in New Mexico, at Santa Fe, right
now. A bunch of pros at clubs. In Philadelphia — Joey Pohle there, and Tommy Gilbert.
And it just … you know, a lot have gone into business, as well. They are salesmen.
Robert was in finance. Very, very successful in finance. It makes me feel old now, now
that he’s retired. And Mike Harran, who was Steve Harran’s son. Steve was the business
manager. He did an internship with Stewarts his senior year, wound up getting a job out
of Stewarts. Got a … became District Manager, Manager, now he’s 59 years old, and I
saw him with Gary Dake the other day and he’s retired! I thought, wow, that’s … makes
me really feel old now! But a great, great career he had, and that was just because of the
internship that he got through Skidmore College, through Stewarts. Tremendous career.
SB: Good. I wonder if you could talk a little bit about your experience and vision of the role of
athletics in a liberal arts institution such as Skidmore, and some of the, um, the trickiness,
shall we say, of that relationship … the complexity, is the word I want.
TB: Right. Well, I think the role is to give the kids an experience to compete against themselves
as well as other students in their class and other colleges and universities. It’s very
difficult to … to pull it out of anything I think is part of their everyday life. I mean I like
the model I saw …when Bev Becker went to West Point for a year, also, and I like the
model they have down there, when I went down, it was, you know, they get up in the
morning and they do their … their conditioning workout, they do their academic work,
and then they have a two hour spot in the afternoon where there is a varsity team,
intramurals, activities of some kind, and it’s just part of your college experience. Uh,
whether it happens to be a varsity sport or club sport, just your own personal workout, but

�it’s part of your daily routine. And I see that as athletics — it’s just part of what a student
does in their daily activity, daily routine at the college.
SB: And does that, I’m thinking about the fit between that and some of the developing sense of
health and wellness that, that we now have.
TB: Correct. Yeah, and exactly. That’s the, I mean, that’s always been the thing that every coach
pushes with his or her students, is that they get, keep themselves in shape and work out.
Have the facilities to do that. Now we used the Y and other places until we started
developing programs here. And now with the new facility going up, what a, what an
opportunity for all of the faculty, staff and students at Skidmore College. It’s really going
to be state of the art. But the sooner that people get into a regular routine, of exercise,
and, whatever it might be, however vigorous it might be or however inactive it might be,
it just is important that you be active in your life.
LG: What do you think the new facility is going to add?
TB: Well first of all the small — I shouldn’t say, the small facility that we have right now there
is so much bigger than it was 25, 30 years ago — but what it’s going to allow now is it’s
never going to be closed down, where faculty and students in their time, free time in the
middle of the day, can’t go work out. Because if there was a class in there, you couldn’t
go use the facility. And it’s small so that all of a sudden if there’s a team that goes in
there or a lot of people have free time to go in, there’s not a station for you to go to, a
treadmill or bike or weight machine and so on; that’s not going to be the case now. It’s
going to be available whenever the building’s open, all the time. And it’s … right now I
work out at the Y every single day, and the number of retired faculty, I just was,
yesterday, talking with Bob [inaudible] for a long time. Retired faculty and current
faculty, staff that are up there. I saw Mark Huibregtse last summer, just before I went
south. It’s going to just be able to keep them on campus in a nice environment. I think it’s
very healthy for a faculty member to be down there working out beside a student of his or
hers. There’s a good relationship that can … only good things happen.

�LG: One last thing I’d like to ask is what have you been doing since retirement?
TB: I’ve been very busy. I saw how …
LG: Oh, and what year did you retire?
TB: ’06. 2006. 17 years. I saw my dad struggle with retirement. I saw what I interpreted as Joe
Palamountain struggling with retirement. I mean his whole life seemed to be Skidmore
College, which obviously Skidmore College needed at the time. So, I decided if I was
going to retire, I had to have a plan. And so I had a plan. I was going to run the Alumni
Golf Tournament for Mike Sposili. I was going to be involved with the Skidmore Hall of
Fame. Be involved with the tournament, the FOSA Tournament, Friends of Skidmore
Athletics tournament here.
LG: Which?
TB: That’s a fundraiser that, Mike Sposili is running it out of his office, Gail was running it out
of her office for a while, and it’s Friends of Skidmore Athletics. You’d pay a certain
amount of money to play in the golf tournament out at Saratoga National, and it raised a
nice chunk of change for the Athletic program.
LG: Saratoga National is a tough course!
TB: Yeah, it really is tough. Then I knew I always wanted to be in Florida so I was down there,
I’m a USGA Rules Official, so I went to different tournaments to … as a volunteer for
colleges and youth, uh … youth programs.
LG: And what did you do as a volunteer?
TB: Just out on the golf course traveling around, kind of like a baseball, like an umpire; you

�referee, you travel around — if the kids have a problem, they’re not sure how to, um,
what the rules situation is, what their choices are with a given circumstances, you guide
them through that decision.
Then I met a wonderful man, Mallory Privett, who was in charge of the Honda Classic,
and he got me involved with the Honda Classic and now I’ve been there sixteen years,
fifteen - sixteen years, and I’m chairman of the Honda Classic. And I’m proud to say that
we raised 7.2 million dollars last year for hundreds of charities and thousands of kids.
The year before we raised 6.2 million, 6.4 million dollars. So, it’s just a ton of money and
so many kids benefit from what we are able to do.
LG: And the Honda Classic takes place where?
TB: The last week of February at the Palm Beach Gardens at PGA National Golf Course
champions’ course. And I might add that this is the last year as a sponsor, so they had an
awful lot of things available at a very reduced rate, so I was able to pick up a dozen
things for the tournament, the Saratoga Players tournament that I’ve talked with Paty …
LG: The Chamber Players?
TB: The Chamber Players, for, um, with Paty. We’ve got umbrellas and hats and balls and
things for, uh, to give away as prizes, which was exciting.
SB: Good.
LG: Anything else we should add, Susan?
SB: Talk to us, is there something you would like to just look back on?
TB: I just, in the years, 26 years I was at Skidmore College, obviously you meet a lot of people

�professionally, and there were a number of opportunities that arose where you might look
to leave, and there were three offers made, and Carol and I, my wife Carol and I, thought
and talked and looked at it and we just thought, “How can you leave home?” I mean
Skidmore became home. And that was just the place that we’re going to, we’re going to
stay here. It’s ah, we still have our house here, although we are eight months in Florida
and only four months here, we still maintain a house and look forward to coming back to
Saratoga in the summertime. But I, from the first, first week I was here and we had the
retreat, Dean Weller, Eric Weller, had a retreat for the chairmen, and I got to know three
or four of the other chairs very well, and did things with them, either playing squash or
golf or tennis or whatever.
LG: Who were they?
TB: Peter Baruzzi.
LG: In art?
TB: In art. Earl Pardon, in art. Jeff Segrave with squash. Tennis with Don Chu , Jeff
[Segrave]… [inaubible], Don McCormack — uh we played a lot of squash together, or
something. I couldn’t play tennis with him, he was too good, but we could play squash
together. And it involved us also with people in town like John Carusone and that whole
group, Bill Dake, John Roohan, ah… Jack Carey, a bunch of people in town, and that
helped us bring their support in for the cause. Not that it wasn’t already there, but it
definitely did help. Ah, but when it just came time to look at another place you thought,
you know there’s … it’s not greener. I thought when I came here in 1980, I’d be here
three to five years and I’d be moving to a different situation. I looked at, probably my
father-in-law helped me most, he said, “If you ever move it’s got to be either Williams,
Bowdoin or Dartmouth. Those are the only ones.” And, opportunities came up at one of
those but we didn’t pursue it enough, we were going to stay here, but three other
opportunities came up and jobs were offered but we decided not to. This was home. It
still is.

�LG: Well, thank you Tim.
TB: Well, thank you. It’s a pleasure. Thank you very much. It’s fun.
[Recording stops, and then is re-started]
LG: Tim, in conversation … you want to mention something about your relationship with
Phyllis Roth?
TB: Yes, thank you. I’ll preface that by saying that through my career, teaching high school and
as a graduate student having bosses and being at Indiana University, Delaware, and then
here, I’ve had many, many bosses through the year … ah, years, but Phyllis was in a class
of her own. She just was spectacular! I can’t tell you the number of times and the
guidance and the direction that, uh, that the athletic program and physical education
program and dance programs benefitted by her, her counsel. I can remember going into
the office, and I always got to the office early, 6:30, 7:00 o’clock every morning, and I’d
see something on the, an email from Phyllis, so I’d answer it right away and “bing,” it
would bing right back. She was on it right away. And never did a day go by that she
didn’t get a response to you, no matter how busy she was. And she would call up and say,
“listen, we need to discuss this,” she said, “We cannot be disturbed. How about meeting
for lunch?” We’d go to lunch and spend a two-hour lunch, iron everything out, we were
not disturbed. It was just tremendous. But she always seemed to be able to work out
solutions to the most difficult problems. She was just a brilliant, brilliant woman and, uh,
I just treasured the times that we had with her, and the counsel that she gave me, our
faculty, and as a result the entire department.
LG: Any one particular situation that stands out or, in general?
TB: Well, I think that the addition to the sports center was one of the biggest ones. I had the

�proposal in and we had, looking at some different things, and she looked at it and
suggested some avenues to go and how to move with it and as a result, we’re sitting in a
faculty meeting and David Eyman was the librarian then … he was making a presentation
at staff meeting over at the Surrey and saying that we were going to close down half of
the library for X number of months and then move into the new part when that’s done,
and have to close it down, so it’s going to be a two, two and a half year project instead of
a year project. And I thought to myself, “You know, what would Phyllis do?” Honestly,
that went through my mind. I sat up and I said, “Dean Ross, what about the possibility of
putting them into the addition that we just built at the sports center and we’ll wait for the
intramural gym for another year?” I’m thinking that’s just what she would have done. It
was in the best interest of the College, maybe not the Department, but the College, for us
to give that space to the library so they could do it in a year. And those are the kinds of
things that she just did time after time.
LG: And Ruth Copans just talked about that ….
TB: Did she?
LG: …that, yeah, in her interview.
TB: It was amazing how … the counsel that she gave. And then it influences your decisions.
You start looking in a broader way of solving problems, of coming up with solutions.
LG: Good. Thank you.
TB: You’re welcome. Thank you.
SB: Thank you.

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                    <text>Interviewee: Sue Van Hook
Years at Skidmore: 1992-2010
Interviewer: Andrea Wise
Location of Interview: Cambridge, NY
Date of Interview: June 3, 2021
00:00:00 Header
00:00:31 Fall 1992 hired as part-time Teaching Associate. “It was so important to me that I
personally drove my application to campus.”
00:01:42 Realized “This is a college in the woods. This is home for me!”
00:02:32 60% fall labs were taught outdoors
00:03:15 Previous career was in land conservancy, 5 years in CA and 5 years in ME
00:03:40 1992, North Woods very quiet; by 1995, mountain bike race, other unsustainable uses
00:05:00 Argued that North Woods is irreplaceable “living laboratory.”
00:06:05 With support from Pres. Glotzbach, Mike West, and Mike Hall, Campus Environment
Committee was allotted money for creation of a North Woods stewardship plan.
00:06:25 Prior to Van Hook’s time at Skidmore, the North Woods had been used for teaching
(for art, literature, geology, music, physical education, etc.), but while she was there, academic
use became more extensive &amp; formalized.
00:07:35 Karen Kellogg hired at Skidmore and Environmental Studies major was born; she
brought Northeast Regional Climate Summit to campus
00:08:15 “Because of our North Woods, … academics from all over …willing to come and
…were very, very jealous."
00:09:16 Mike Hall attended Campus Environment Committee meetings and listened carefully supporting the creation of the North Woods stewardship plan.
00:09:40 Van Hook wrote stewardship plan in summer. Also showed staff woods as
explanation.
00:10:09 North Woods home to water snakes, redwing blackbirds, foxes, owls, prehistoric
horsetails, yellow ladies’ slippers, 33 of the 36 species of ferns in NY state, etc.
00:11:00 “…those things started to disappear as more and more people came … the tragedy of
the commons story.”
00:12:08 Van Hook told Glotzbach &amp; West, “The environment really needs to be part of every
decision the college makes.”
00:13:10 Therefore, Glotzbach &amp; West invited chair of Campus Environment Committee to
attend Institutional Policy and Planning Committee meetings.
00:14:25 Once on campus, Van Hook considered getting PhD. However, realized would have to
give up many community and parenting activities. Decided “I had the best of both worlds” being
involved in community and teaching the fun part of classes.
00:17:07 Skidmore had been hiring TAs on adjunct, one semester at a time basis. Teaching
quality suffered as adjuncts were unfamiliar with the labs. With Phyllis Roth’s support,
Department chair Dave Domozych formalized one-year contracts, then three-year contracts, and
eventually a Senior Teaching Associate position for long-term TAs.
00:19:20 Curricular changes in 18 years — in first 8 years, 4 required lab courses before
students could specialize. Then, demand for specialization sooner, so 4 courses combined to 2.

�00:20:16 Spent a summer learning Cell &amp; Molecular Biology lab techniques. Challenging at
first, but then became fascinated with the microscopic world where “molecular engines … send
things around inside the cell.”
00:22:09 One-on-one research opportunities led some undergraduates to publish papers.
00:22:53 Effects of digital age on writing quality, plus combining foundational courses, led to
loss of student abilities for cross-disciplinary thinking, making connections on their own.
00:23:39 Climate change has increased student awareness of environment and related interests
in gardening, outdoors, etc.
00:25:00 New science wing allowed for grant funded collection of specialized microscopes;
also, atrium led to more connection between science faculty because more mingling.
00:26:10 Phyllis Roth - in addition to being supportive of TA professionalization, also
extremely personally supportive during Van Hook’s breast cancer.
00:28:10 Roth unique, easy to talk to. ,one of a kind; when being treated for her breast cancer,
Roth wore many different wigs, saying “let’s make it fun.”
00:29:30 Van Hook had 3 young children, 30 minute commute, and multiple community
activities when starting as TA. Work-life balance? Schedule corresponded well with children’s
school, and no pressure to research/publish, but encouragement to do so.
00:31:09 As the children grew older, worked at Skidmore for summers.” Skidmore Life Science
Camp for Girls - taught 8 or 9 years, “awesome experiences.”
00:32:24 Camp teaching evolved into summer independent study work with Skidmore students,
which then evolved to working with Ecovative &amp; continuing research with Skidmore students.
00:33:55 Technology changes: Did “chalkboard teaching” while grad student, then overhead
projectors in first years as Skidmore TA, then whiteboard/smartboard teaching along with two
younger peers (“Charlie’s Angels”).
00:35:21 When Blackboard tech arrived, where providing syllabus, giving assignments, grading
lab reports was all done through software, “it was really a big part of my decision to transition
and leave.” Preferred grading outdoors. Zoom has advantage over Blackboard because can see
students. “I really rely on energetic exchange between people — to know how they’re doing, to
know how I’m doing, who’s struggling, who has a question…”
00:38:15 Working with HEOP students (Higher Education Opportunity Program) — saw
student potential, many challenges for them, much extra help in office hours.
00:39:45 One student, with much mentoring, is now health care professional in El Salvadore.
00:41:01 Was once called at 2 am from very stressed student, worked with HEOP to help him
complete semester; “I … learned their life stories,” gained trust.
00:42:00 Students with major life challenges — need to start supporting them earlier; HEOP
students arriving on campus earlier. “Some of my best experiences … pre-orientation trips.”
00:44:22 Only one woman faculty when Van Hook was in college in 1970s. Saw her in Albany
airport years later; now very close. “She was my role model for being a female scientist.”
00:44:50 At Skidmore in 1992, a few women faculty in department, a few people of color, all of
the TAs were women. Now changes - some more diversity. Still, a need for STEM pipeline.
00:45:55 Eg. Soul Fire Farm teaches African American’s how to farm, providing a pipeline.
00:47:45 Science “frontiers” - currently shifting away from the microbiology frontier (previous
frontiers were space and oceans). Now it’s soil!
00:48:15 Agricultural practices as far back as Mesopotamia are wrong. Soil mycorrhizal
systems of fungi and bacteria shouldn’t be tilled because leads to off gassing of CO2.
00:50:05 Climate change can be reversed with better soil management.

�00:53:35 Story of transition to Ecovative: dreaming techniques, “life is mushrooming.”
00:55:00 Mycorestoration and mycoremediation workshops with Paul Stamets.
00:57:12 Thursday Naturalists (octogenarians) - saw face in Chaga mushroom.
00:59:23 Snake death dance/heart shape, message to “do what I love most.”
01:02:55 Phone call with Eben from Ecovative - told about dream exercise, chaga &amp; snake.
01:03:37 Began mentoring Ecovative staff.
01:04:55 Won EPA grant, collaborated with Skidmore students (research).
01:05:50 Fall 2009, because of recession, Skidmore needed to lay off 70 people - offered
voluntary incentives, provided Van Hook with “graceful transition” to Ecovative.
01:07:00 “The message for me in my whole healing journey from the breast cancer has been to
listen to your heart more.”
01:07:55 Taught Ecovative employees fungi/science, first company grew slowly, then 60
employees during a recession! Mushroom packaging was ahead of its time, now catching on.
Now Ecovative exploring alternative meats.
01:10:10 A thread through her careers was to care for people; misses the students tremendously.
01:10:48 One more Skidmore story - transformative experience of student with cerebral palsy.
Mattress in car to get to experiment site in North Woods, photographed slides at different
magnifications so she could see what other students saw. She now has “PhD in neuroscience so
that she could understand her illness.” “Those are the things you teach for… I miss the students.”
01:13:00 End

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                    <text>Interview with Sue Van Hook by Andrea Wise, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History Project,
Cambridge, NY, June 3, 2021.

ANDREA WISE: Good morning, this is Andrea Wise interviewing Sue Van Hook on the
morning of June third, 2021, at her home in Cambridge, New York. And now I’m going to have
Sue introduce herself and tell us how she first got involved with Skidmore College.

SUE VAN HOOK: Good morning, Andrea. It’s great to see you again, after 11 years, since I left
Skidmore College. So, I came to Skidmore as a Teaching Associate for a part-time position
teaching Population Biology. And I had a two-year-old at the time, and two other girls in
elementary grades, and my husband came in one day and said, “It’s time for you to go back to
work.” So, there was an ad in the paper, the Albany Times Union, for this part-time position in
Population Biology and I said, “Well this fits pretty well.” And I was applying for another job,
with American Farmland Trust, at the same time. And, I went to two — both interviews, and as it
turns out it was great that I got this job and not the other one. [laughs] But I remember that it was
so important to me that I personally drove my application to campus.
AW: Oh wow!
SVH: Since I lived nearby. And I drove in to the main entrance there and I was just
overwhelmed with the allée of, not even a formal allée, a woods, of trees, for quite a distance, as
the first impression that this college was making on anyone who entered it. And then I turned on
to the perimeter road to get to the Dana parking lot, and I got more into the woods. And when I
turned into the parking lot there were tons of trees in the parking lot and I got to park near the
trees and they shaded my car and I thought, “This is a college in the woods! This is home for
me!” The woods are my home. I feel more comfortable there than anywhere else, so I felt really
really good about that first impression. And then I went in and met Bernie Possidente, and he
was wearing red sneakers and it just got better from there! [laughs]. They ended up giving me a
very informal interview that day — they were desperate for someone for this position and, um …
I think I got a call within a couple of days — “You’re hired.” [laughs]. Very, very fun.
So, as it turns out, I was teaching for Monica Raveret Richter in Population Biology, and it
wasn’t exactly my field — I was a botanist and mycologist, but it was okay. And the best part of
the class, for as long as we could in the fall we went outdoors for the labs. And we did three
weeks of labs on bees — testing bee preferences. We made, the students made their own bee
feeders, we kept beehives in the lab, they learned how to paint bees, we were almost handling
bees, and we did it all in the North Woods, so I was, like, “I get to teach the fun part of the
course with the great students in lab, hands-on, for three hours, outdoors!”
AW: [laughs]

SVH: “Outdoors again, next week too!” And so, I would say a good 60 percent of our labs in the
fall semester were outdoors in the North Woods, and it was amazing! It was amazing! And so the
reason it’s so important to me is I came from 10 years background of land conservation before
that. On both coasts. I was a preserve manager for the Nature Conservancy in northern California

�for five years, where I did my graduate work, and then I was a director of stewardship and land
conservation for Maine Coast Heritage Trust for the whole coast of Maine. And that was my
entrance into this great new campus with woods!
So, it got challenged right away. I came in ’92 and it was in 1995 that the first championship
mountain bike race was held for New York State in our precious woods. And that changed, sort
of, the course of history for the North Woods. They’re still a wonderful place to be, but it’s, um,
it’s harder for me to go there every year.
AW: I’ll bet.
SVH: Yeah, but the beginning part was, I would be out there by myself scouting, preparing, and
I would be there for hours and never see another person, and … besides the carriage roads, you
know, which had been maintained well for a hundred years or more, the small trails were small!
Really small! You really felt like you were in the woods! And so … lucky.
AW: Yeah. So, tell us a little bit, please … I wonder if you could tell us a little bit about just
how you opted to embrace the North Woods as a teaching lab and formalize it a little bit more
for all of Skidmore. I mean, there was a great deal of work that went in to development … I hate
to use the word “development,” but to embracing the North Woods and having it become a
teaching opportunity for you and others on the Skidmore Campus, of course the students as well.
SVH: Yes, so, that is a long story … and it goes through three college presidents. And, what I
saw there was a living laboratory, and the argument I made after this threat from the biking
championship, was that we could build 10 science buildings and we could take wrecking balls to
them and we could still rebuild them — we wouldn’t lose too much, other than money. But what
was occurring in the North Woods was, if we were wrecking it with inappropriate uses on slopes
and willy nilly trails being created, without any stewardship — we couldn’t replace that ever. So
we’re looking at tens of thousands of years of evolutionary history in the fauna and flora, and
now the funga … there’s a new word for fungi kingdom, it’s called fun-ga. Love it! We could
never replace that, and that was the argument I made, and I thought to a classical scholar such as
David Porter, he would hear that argument. Didn’t. To Jamie Studley — she didn’t hear that
argument either. And finally, it was actually Mike West and Phil Glotzbach together who heard
that argument, and we were able to finally get some level of protection for … in the shape of a
stewardship plan that we ended up writing through the Campus Environment Committee, to sort
of formalize this as a living laboratory. And in the meantime, well, even when I got there the
woods were being used. They were being used by art students, they were being used by literature
classes — they were studying Thoreau. They were being used by the geology labs. They were
being used by music … and some PE teachers were, you know, Physical Education had their
students out there. So, I think there was always a history of students using the woods, but not as
extensively or formally as what we did over the course of the 18 years that I was there.

AW: So at some point you became involved with the Campus Environment Committee. Your
love of the North Woods, your sensitivity to the concerns surrounding overuse of campus
resources, led you to a broader appointment or a broader position on the Campus Environment
… so tell me a little bit about that.

�SVH: I don’t remember how I got invited to that committee, but [laughs] it probably was after
the bike race. Umm, Eban Goodstein, from Economics, was chairing the committee at that point,
and I just sat in on a couple of meetings and then I went, “Yeah, I need to get involved in this.”
And … its fuzzy where the leadership went, but Eban Goodstein, …well I guess one of the
monumental things that happened during my tenure there was shortly after Karen Kellogg was
hired and ES was born — the Environmental Studies major was born. Eban brought … no, Karen
actually brought — Eban had left and gone to Lewis and Clark, and he started the first Climate
Science Summit among 40 academic institutions — and this would have been the early 2000s,
and Karen went to that on the west coast and then she brought it back to Skidmore and we had
our first Northeast Regional Climate Summit on Skidmore Campus. It’s pretty awesome!
AW: Yeah.
SVH: Yeah. It was very empowering to know that we had the awareness building there. And
because of our North Woods, all of these academics from all over New England and the
Northeast were willing to come and we went out there with them and showed them our living
laboratory and they were very, very jealous. Turns out there were only seven college campuses
in the Northeast that had adjacent properties, and ours was one of the larger ones. The biggest
one is at Williams College, with 2,500 acres, but it’s not immediately adjacent to campus.
AW: When you say adjacent properties you mean wooded properties?
SVH: Yeah. Walk out the door from a classroom into the woods.

AW: Okay.
SVH: At Williams you have to get in a car or take a bus to get there. But ours was one of the
next larger ones, and that was an important fact for me. I mean, I said to the admissions people,
“Mary Lou, this needs to be featured. You want to attract good students here? We have one of
the largest living laboratories. Put it in the admissions information!” And so, so that was an
interesting progression. And I guess I just got more and more involved in the committee, as a
member of the committee. I remember Mike Hall being on the committee, and Mike was really
good at listening. He was really good at listening, and he represented a lot of the financial
constraints for the Institution but he was also very supportive. So we got money to do the
Stewardship Plan, and over the summer I wrote it and did all of the research, and I took Karl
Broekhuizen out there; he’s like, “What is this all about?” And I said, “Why don’t you come on a
walk with me, Karl?” and it was the middle of a hot summer day and I walked him on every
single trail out there in an hour and a half, and he was quite [laughs] quite exhausted by the end,
but it, it drove home the point. Because a lot of the people sitting on campus in offices just see
the edge … right? They just see the edge. Step in a couple of feet and you’ve got water snakes
three feet long in the Wilson Marsh, and the redwing blackbird territories, and you’ve got the
horsetails, which are prehistoric, dinosaur-type plants, growing around the water tower! And you
go a few more feet over the hill and you’ve got the yellow ladies slippers, which only grow on
limestone soils — very, very rare populations in all of New York State! And eventually you get

�deep into the woods and you get 33 species [of ferns] — of 36 total species in New York State,
33 of them are on our campus!
AW: That’s awesome.
SVH: That’s what they didn’t see.
AW: Yeah.
SVH: That’s what they didn’t see. They didn’t hear the bird, they didn’t see the owl, they didn’t
see the fox family that we showed students — with the pups — they didn’t see that, and all of
those things started to disappear as more and more people came to the campus for biking, for dog
walking, you know, it’s the tragedy of the commons story.
SVH: So eventually my good friend Sue Rosenberg, in your department, became the chair of the
Campus Environment Committee, and she was chair when we wrote the Stewardship Plan. And
we were able to hire some students. We were able to create a Director of Sustainability in the
Facilities Department, who was housed there, who lived there, and at first it was a student, Mary
Patterson, and eventually it became a full-fledged position after I left. So, after Sue — I can’t
remember the transition with Sue, but it went from Sue to me. And, the Campus Environment
Committee included one faculty member that was the liaison to the Institutional Policy and
Planning Committee, the highest committee level of the college. And that person never showed
up at our meetings, … I mean, just rarely. I don’t even remember; it was a bunch of different
faculty members in the time that I was on the committee. And so finally I went to Phil Glotzbach
and Mike West and I said, “So, this arrangement isn’t working.” And I said, “You know, the
environment really needs to be part of every decision this college makes. Every single decision.
Whether it’s about students, whether it’s about student housing, whether it’s about curriculum,
whether it’s about physical plant — there’s an environmental component, and especially as
climate change is facing… growing more and more in our faces, we have to plan for this. And I
said, “You know what, this woods we have is a carbon storage facility. We can get paid for this
woods! Have you thought about that?” Mike West, at the time, had just arrived on campus, and
he came to our meetings. He came to our meetings — a lot of them! And he heard the issues we
were working on, one of which was energy, renewable energy; and Karen was very, very
involved in pushing that. He investigated geothermal and look what happened! I mean the whole
campus is geothermal now, and we led the academic community in that effort, absolutely led it.
So, they heard me and said, “Ok, fine, let’s take the chair of the Campus Environment
Committee and have them come sit on IPPC,” and at the time it happened to be me so … you
know, me, little TA in the Biology Department, sitting with all the deans and …! [laughs]. It was
great! I loved it! And I sat quietly for six months and listened, and then I started using my voice.
So that’s sort of the trajectory of my time with Campus Environment Committee. I don’t even
know if the Committee still exists, frankly, now that we have a Director of Sustainability, I have
a feeling it’s been subsumed under that umbrella?
AW: Yeah, but it has assumed a prominence that it would not have without all this foundational
work that you led. So, tip of the hat to you, Sue.

�AW: I wonder now if this is a good opportunity to, it sounds like it might be, to lead into your
work in the sciences. The challenges and the rewards of being a Teaching Assistant in the
Biology Department, not only incorporating the North Woods in much of your work, but also
other opportunities in the classroom and beyond.
SVH: Yeah, thanks for that question — that’s a great one. So, I have to tell you that I got back
on campus. I was sharing an office in that — remember that weird hall down from your office, it
was just windows and they put up a board. I was in one of those [laughs], the first one — with
another woman who was hired part-time, a teaching associate … who didn’t do very well, she
was gone in one semester. But, … so I got there and I’m like, “I’m back in academia! Oh, this
feels fun!” I started unpacking all of my science books, you know, we’d moved to Cambridge
two years earlier and I’d just left them boxed up in the attic, and I brought them out and I put
them on my shelves and I’m like, “Ok, maybe it’s time for me to go back to school and get my
PhD!”
AW: Oh, my goodness!
SVH: “Maybe that’s a really good idea. The kids are kind of all in school and taken care of in
daycare; I can manage this.” And I thought of it for about six months, and then I watched all of
the biology faculty, [laughs] and I saw that if they had children, they had one, and if they had any
social life, it was with one another — you know, maybe Friday-night pizza, that was about it.
And I was, meanwhile, coming … I was in a part-time position, I was coming home and
coaching pee-wee soccer, pee-wee softball, I was coaching with my kids, doing dance classes
with them at the Dance Center.

AW: Sorry to interrupt, you have three children?
SVH: Three daughters, yes, yes, yes. And I thought, “Well, I’d have to give up all of this
community involvement that I have in my community here. Head of PTA Environment
Committee, you know, lots of things… I was involved with singing in the Chorale. And I
thought about it for a long time, because I was always a really good student, at the top of my
class, and I was like — the PhD trajectory, I was accepted to a PhD program or two and I chose
not to at the time and I went with my husband’s dreams instead of mine, and so I was like,
“Yeah, I’m really supposed to go down that path,” and I really made a very conscious decision
that I had the best of both worlds. And teaching labs was like definitely the funnest part of the
course. I felt that students retained more of those experiences than they did from lectures, and I
thought, “Just be happy with this. This is enough. This is fine. This is awesome.” And, the way
things grew — and this is where Phyllis Roth comes in — she was Dean of the Faculty at the
time when Betsy Franz left, and passed the baton to me. We taught together for one semester and
Betsy left. After 25 years she said, “Sue, I feel confident enough that you are going to fill my slot
here. This is good.” [laughs]. Almost did. I didn’t make it 25 years.

But, at the time they had been hiring a lot of adjunct TAs, you know, one semester at a time, and
they were "less than” … they were “less than” in delivery to the students. They were barely able
to teach the labs in terms of following directions of what the lab exercise was or experiment was.
And so, the Department made a conscious decision to up it, to up the standard. And, you know, a

�lot of research institutions, the labs are all taught by graduate students, right. So Skidmore is
different in that regard, we didn’t have a graduate program. So we actually hired people. So, I
was part-time for fall semester; for spring semester they asked — I went from part-time teaching
two labs, I think, a week, to an overload spring semester. [laughs] So they … they saw a good
thing when they got one. I was very broadly trained with my natural history education at
Humboldt State University in Northern California in botany and mycology. So, I did the
overload and then by that fall I’m like, “Okay, that was not fun! [laughs] And you’re paying me
$2,000 to do this? No, I don’t think so.” So we really made the TA positions more formalized,
and we were on one-year contacts at least. And then when Dave Domozych became the chair and
his wife was one of the TAs, along with me, she had her PhD, Dave went to Phyllis and said,
“You know, can we give them three-year contracts?” And so that happened through Phyllis’
support. And so there was an evolution, and the other … the next step, was, “Can we give them
any promise of a promotion? Anything? Can we give them anything?” Well at the time Loretta
Parsons had been there over 25 years and … she, you know, that’s a long time. Can we at least
make her a Senior Teaching Associate?” Which they did, and she got a big chunk of change, and
then, we had to go through the process but there was at least that opportunity to get one step
higher. Ok, so we did it! And then, the three of us that were there used to joke about the new
people coming in and say, “You know, we’d make more money if we quit and reapplied.”
[laughs].
AW: [laughs] I don’t know [laughs].
SVH: [laughs] Well, they always started way higher than we did. I started at $18,000.
AW: Oh wow.
SVH: Yeah, for a full-time salary. Yeah, so…But, I don’t care about all of that, and part was
that it was the most fun! And I went through several curricular changes. So, we had single
courses for two years straight — students had to take Population Biology in the fall, Plant
Biology in the spring, Cell and Molec in the next fall and Animal Biology in the following
spring. They had to do two years of required courses before they could get in to electives. And
after eight years of that — this is the changing in the student, incoming student expectations and
standards, right? They want … there was more specialization happening sooner. Right? So, they
want … the Cell and Molecular thing, track, was like really hot stuff, right? The genetics and
doing the PCRs and identifying the genes and … that was just hot, a hot ticket item. Field
biology? Ehh, not so much. [laughs] Right? So there was pressure on the department to shorten
that requirement phase from two years to one year, so we crammed those four courses into two
courses. So all of a sudden, I had to teach Cell and Molecular Biology, as a field biologist. So I
had a very long summer training with Pat Hilleren, [laughs] learning to do PCRs, and I failed
about seven times and I said, “You still want me to teach this?” [laughs]
AW: And help us … PCRs are?
SVH: Polymerase Chain Reactions, right? So you’re extracting DNA and then you’re subjecting
it to a bunch of enzymes and chopping it up and replicating it really fast in a heated up little
machine — this is how much I remember [laughs] — not very much! And you amplify the DNA

�so you have a big enough chunk that you can run it on a gel and spread it out so you can actually
see the different genes.
AW: Okay. Oh wow!
SVH: This was like — I had done plenty of labs, gel technique with auger and Petrie dishes, so
handling the auger gels was fine, you know, I knew all of that, but working with the DNA part!
But then I had my eyes opened to this whole other world, this microscopic world, and how these
molecular engines act like little Pac Man and move, send things around inside the cell, and I
eventually became totally fascinated with it.
AW: Um, so obviously this is a response to student expectations, student preparation, and just
changing methodologies in academe, right? I mean there’s a whole bunch of things at work,
forces at work on this, but in terms of student outcomes, the preparation they got at Skidmore did
led to some pretty awesome achievements on behalf of our alumni, correct?
SVH: Yes, correct. The super-achievers were still there. And Nicole Donofrio published several
papers as an undergraduate, doing research with Dave Domozych. There were a few others, we
had, there were a few whiz kids that just took it very far, as far as they could, because they had
that one-on-one research opportunity, which continued all through the 18 years I was there. That
was very special, and we emphasized that to the Admissions Department, too. Very, very rarely
can you go to an institution where your kid is going to get one-on-one research experience, if
they choose, with a faculty member. Not a TA, a faculty member. We TAs expanded those
opportunities, too, over the years, for more independent study.

But, the writing quality declined. You know, it was really the digital age taking hold, right?
Screen mentality, not having whole conversations, not learning language, not learning how to
write it, not learning how to speak it. Everything getting shrunk to bite size. Not being able to
synthesize and not being able to use cross-disciplinary thinking. So for me, the shrinking of the
courses from four into two, we lost all the depth, and all that depth allows you to do the crossdisciplinary thinking, to make connections on your own — “oh THAT is really connected to
THAT?” That all disappears. And so that was hard to swallow because you want to impart all of
it. You want to say, “No, you need to know this much!” I would say the environment and the
awareness of science literacy increased. Right? So you have more kids that are interested in the
outdoors, more kids interested in gardening, more kids interested in environment, more kids
interested in climate science …. So there was a student movement for environmental awareness,
but I don’t see that the science requirements followed that. Now I think it’s shifted, so you can
fill me in on …
AW: Well, actually I’ve been gone now for a few years myself, but I believe you’re right, I
think it has shifted. And then there is also, actually, the growth of Environmental Studies, which
sort of emphasizes what you just mentioned, I mean, growth in science in a different area. But
now, more important than ever, we have a brand-new science building at Skidmore. Have you
been to that new building? Do you know much about it?
SVH: I have not been there. [laughs] I’ve been back on campus a few times to teach for a few

�people, lead some walks in the woods. Umm, you know, that said, I witnessed the new wing
being built, at the tune of $4 million at the time, which allowed for the super-duper microscopy
facility to be built. Again, Skidmore’s on the map because of Dave Domozych and that, and the
grants he obtained for that — every kind of microscope we have. And undergrads get trained on
them and get to use them, that’s unbelievable — no one gets to do that at undergraduate
anywhere else. So I witnessed all that. And that, because of the atrium on that wing, being able to
see all the floors brought the geosciences and the physical sciences and the chemical sciences
and the biological a little bit closer. A little bit closer, because before we were isolated on floors
and we didn’t really go between floors but the atrium we used and we walked down through
there and we saw each other that way.
AW: Sure, that makes sense. So you talked a little bit about Phyllis Roth, initially, and I’m just
interested since she was Dean … and Interim President when you were there? I’m trying to
remember.
SVH: Yeah.
AW: So I think you had some pretty good interaction with her, maybe you could give me a
sense of how supportive she might have been of the sciences and of your work?
SVH: Yeah, I love to talk about Phyllis. A wonderful character. [laughs] I miss her. So initially
Phyllis, as I said, was very involved with Dave Domozych in upping our positions as Teaching
Associates and giving us the opportunity for one promotion commensurate with salary increase,
too, so that was very much appreciated. And then Phyllis did something really, really, personally
wonderful for me. So I was diagnosed with my breast cancer on September 9th, 1998 — nine,
nine, nine, eight. And I had told Dave Domozych, chair at the time, that I was going to give him
a call the next day when I got my results, and either I was going to come or I wasn’t going to
come. And the reason I was going to be able to tell him that was because Phyllis said I could take
a year off paid. She gave me full pay for six months, she introduced me to someone in the
English department who had just been through this, right away, and I went and had lunch with
that person right away, Jo Devine, and we had a wonderful lunch — took away a lot of my fear.
And then I was on disability pay for the other six months. It took that whole level of stress, that
whole level of stress away. She knew I had to focus on me, and I don’t think I could have gotten
through that year with my little children — my children were 7, 11 and 14 — and … not having
to worry about finances, and my husband is a self-employed artist, so there wasn’t a whole lot
coming in from that stream of revenue, and so this was a really, a huge meaningful, supportive
act on her part. And then it was just too ironic that she then had to go through this herself. It was
just too much. So, I will always hold Phyllis very dear to my heart, for that and many other
reasons. I mean, she was someone I could just talk to, and I didn’t feel that way with a lot of
people in the upstairs, on the fourth floor, but I felt very comfortable going to her with any kind
of faculty-related concerns or student concerns. And she was just a pip! I mean, she approached
her breast cancer by wearing a different kind of wig every day! I mean, I thought, “God, you’re
so awesome!” I didn’t … I went bald and turbaned, you know, I couldn’t put a wig on my head!
She goes, “Oh come on, let’s make it fun!”
AW: I remember that. I do remember Phyllis’s many wigs and I’m not surprised to hear about

�this powerful expression of personal and professional support for you and I’m glad for you and I
think we all feel the loss of Phyllis, even now…. This sort of leads me into matters of gender and
work-life balance, and obviously a health crisis is above the line here, but I’m just wondering,
you had three children when you started teaching at Skidmore — you still have three children —
your children were young when you started teaching at Skidmore. You had a 30-mile commute
to Saratoga. You had engagements in the community and other interests. How did you balance
all of this with a pretty demanding job as a lab teacher at Skidmore?

SVH: Once I made the decision that being a lab instructor was enough, it eased. And I realized
that I’m really only there eight months a year, right? I get pretty much three months off in the
summer and I get January kind of off, although we are doing a lot of prep. So it corresponded
very well with the kids in their school years. When they were really little, I took my summers
off, and then I couldn’t resist the wonderful opportunities that Skidmore afforded me in being
able to do research if I wanted to. So there was no pressure to publish and do research, like
tenure-track faculty have, but I was certainly encouraged, and that was a gift, too. So I could use
the facilities such as the autoclave in the microbiology lab, or the greenhouse, you know, to do
experiments. And … and my love was fungi! So, one of the first, well, and we also had a
sabbatical replacement for population biology for Monica one year, and his approach was to let
students do independent research right from the get-go, right the minute they walked in the door
as first year students. And Laurie Freeman and I were co-teaching the labs at that point and so
we said, “Yeah, bring it on! We’ll create a 12, 15, 30, whatever many students out of 120 want to
do this.” So, out of 120 students we had 10 percent — we had 12 students that wanted to do this.
So, I felt glad that I had time off, but, as the years evolved and the kids grew older, I was able to
go back there for summers, and one of the draws was the life science camp for girls, the
Skidmore Life Science Camp for Girls, sixth grade to eighth grade.
AW: Right.
SVH: And … for one year we had it for boys, too, it was co-ed, because my daughter went one
year with her co-horts who were guys. And the boys at sixth grade to eighth grade — oh my
gosh, not worth it! [laughs]. Wayyy too hard to handle. So we decided, we made a decision that
this is just going to be a girls science camp, you know, we’re just going to do STEM for girls.
And I think I did that for eight or nine years, and … awesome, awesome experiences for the
girls! It was pulling garlic mustard, we had them all in hip-waders in Wilson Marsh pulling out
purple loosestrife and while we were in there, we saw the snakes and the turtles and the birds
nesting and it was just awesome. So, that evolved from that camp in the summer, which was a
two-week camp, into then working independent study with students. And then, my connection
with Ecovative, the last four years, or three, four, five years I was there, presented a new grant
funded opportunity — it was for students to get paid to do research for the EPA and the USDA,
and then after I mentored two students, two of our students in their senior years for those
capstone research projects, both got hired immediately upon their presentations at the end of the
summer over in Murray-Aiken, and worked for Ecovative for a number of years. I started
working just independent study with anybody who wanted to, so I got a lot of ES students who
were really fascinated with mushroom packaging and what Ecovative was doing for the
environment, and worked with just a lot of different extra kids that way, as I was transitioning.

�AW: I will talk a little bit about Ecovative in a minute, but I want to ask, also, if you can tell me
a little bit — we talked about this before the tape started running — about IT, and changes in
technology and how that may have affected you, expectations for you as a teacher, expectations
of your students. Did it change the way you taught? Did it help/hurt? Some of the challenges?
SVH: So, my first response is, I got out in time [laughs]. That said, my graduate work was done
— and I TA-ed for seven years as a graduate student — so I did a lot of chalkboard teaching and
I was very comfortable doing that. Then we started to get … we were still using overhead
projectors in the labs …
AW: I know, I remember [laughs].
SVH: … for eight years with Monica. I don’t think we got beyond overhead projectors in Plant
Biology. Overhead projectors! I still have all of those mylars up in my filing cabinets. I just can’t
throw them away, thinking someday they’ll be useful again. And then it evolved, and my
exposure to it was through Environmental Science, through teaching. I eventually went to
teaching half the year in Environmental Science, ES 105 labs, with Kim and Karen, which was
— the nickname for the three of us, by the students, was the Charlie’s Angels! [laughs] And so,
we got some pretty cool imitations from our students, I must say! But they started using the
Smart Boards because they were younger faculty who had come in with it, right? I’m teaching up
here with all the old faculty who don’t know how to do this, and they’re coming in with this
whole Smart Board technology in front of the classroom and so I had to adapt to it. But by the
very end, they introduced the Blackboard …?
AW: Whiteboard?
SVH: No, the Smart Board was the whiteboard, but the Blackboard was a software program
where you interface with the students on the software, like you give them their assignments on
there, you give them the syllabus on there, you read their lab reports on this thing, on this
computer thing. I’m like, oh no, I do enough time on the computer screen, I do not want to be
reading student papers on the computer screen when normally I go up in the field where my
husband’s painting for a weekend and I look out over this beautiful landscape of fall leaves and I
grade papers up there. That’s where I’m grading papers. I am not sitting at a computer grading
papers. So it was really a big part of my decision to transition and leave. Yeah, I just did not
want … and then they were just beginning to teach online courses and like, “Sue, do you want to
teach this online course this summer?” “N-o, n-o.”
AW: But of course, and I understand what you’re saying and I’ve felt it myself and I’ve heard it
from others, but this past year of COVID has taught us, more than anything, the ability to pivot
and use online resources. It’s the thing that kept many of us going. I mean, did it make you think,
“Oh, should I have done more or should I do more, or …?” Any regrets?

SVH: No regrets, but I did adapt, right? And Zoom was very different than what we had
available 10 years ago. So Zoom you can see each other and you can put up your slideshow, your
PowerPoint slideshow, and interact that way and see them, you know, you can at least see
people. You know, I’m an energy worker, as well, I do healing touch, so I really rely on

�energetic exchange between people — to know how they’re doing, to know how I’m doing,
who’s struggling, who has a question, you know I just … the in-person thing will never be
replaceable really, but Zoom does a pretty good job of making it available in this pandemic. And
I think we will … you know, I really don’t ever want to drive to another meeting! [laughs] I do
yoga four mornings a week, which I did this morning from my living room with my yoga
instructor on the screen, and I may not ever transition away from that, actually.
AW: Yeah, it’s true.
SVH: Yeah.
AW: So I want to briefly pivot here, myself, and just … you’ve sort of alluded to this a couple
of times, you’ve mentioned students, and I’m just interested, over your 18 years at Skidmore,
some thoughts about changes in the student body, or any particular student stories stand out in
your mind even now?
SVH: So one big elephant in the room is BIPOC. We haven’t talked about that. And during my
tenure there it was the push across the board for multiculturalism to increase, multiculturalism on
campuses. And I was certainly part of that. And HEOP [Opportunity Program] was a big piece of
that, and HEOP in the sciences was definitely a challenge. So I always had HEOP students
among the 48 or 50 students I taught every semester, and I was on the phone with the HEOP
people over in Starbuck a lot, because they kept telling me, “Don’t alter your expectations, don’t
alter the way you grade papers, don’t alter a thing. We’re bringing these kids in, we’re giving
them extra help.” And, so, okay, so I gave the extra help in my office hours for making up a lab
or redoing a lab or … and yet, I got into a real fight one time about this because I said, “They’re
still pouring through the cracks. This isn’t working! This isn’t working. We need to do
something different here.” And I remember we had one African American student, he was in my
Population Biology Lab and Plant Biology Lab for the first two semesters — it was like, we had
a department-wide discussion at one of our department meetings saying “We’re going get this
guy through. He has enough potential, we are gonna get him through.” And we did.
I had one student from El Salvador, who happened to be an exchange student here in this town
and who my daughters adopted and gave all their clothes to because she arrived with no clothing.
We went through the attic and among the three daughters we outfitted her with all her needs for
the year. And she was playing soccer with my middle daughter and then she had the opportunity
to stay and she came to Skidmore, and she was in my lab in Biology, in Plant Biology and
Population Biology. I spent a lot of extra time with her and I knew her. I knew … she came here
not knowing English, you know, as a high school student, eleventh grader, and even when she
wasn’t in my courses, she was still in my office hours, you know, because she knew me and she
could trust me and I mentored her, and I mentored her, and I mentored her, and I mentored her,
and she went from being a C minus student finally up to like a B plus and got through. And she
and I have stayed in touch and she is now back in El Salvador, living with her family, married,
with kids, and is a health-care professional.
AW: Oh wow. That’s awesome.

�SVH: It’s a great success story. I had another situation where I was called at two o’clock in the
morning from one of my students who had been admitted to Four Winds, and he was begging me
not to flunk him, you know, to hold on, it was near finals time and the pressure was just too great
and he collapsed. And in talking … I’m like, “Why are you calling me? I’m not the right person
you should be calling.” He said, “But I can trust you, I can trust you, and you need to do this for
me.” And so I got on the phone with HEOP and we came up with solutions. But I, in my office
hours, had learned their life stories, and these are kids who are sending back money to their
families, who took care of all their siblings all through high school, with single parents, I mean,
their stories were just phenomenal! So, we need to do better, younger, we need to start at …
three years old! You know! And it’s hard to force it at this level because you mentally see the
need and want it to happen, but it doesn’t happen that way, you have to grow it. And so we
started bringing the HEOP students on campus a whole month early, the whole month of August,
to prepare them.
Some of my best experiences were, Kim and I led pre-orientation trips to … and we did the
Environmental Studies one. And so we took kids backpacking through the woods at Merck
Forest. And I did that for eight years and we had a lot of HEOP students come on those, a lot of
international students come on those, and one of the best times was [laughs] … Abdullah Bah
did get through the program as well, and he came from Senegal, and we’re on this field trip and
we’re working forestry all day long. We all have hardhats on and we’re clearing brush from the
trail crew and we get to the end of the day at the cabin and I say, “Ok, it’s time to go for a swim
in the lake.” That was our shower, right? And so everybody comes, and one girl got really hurt
that day, she fell from the dock — that was an emergency we dealt with. And another girl that
trip forgot her contacts, so that was another psychological emergency — I’m doing healing touch
for her, [laughs] giving her my lavender oil to get her through the night, for her anxiety attack.
Anyway, so we get back from the lake and then he shows up to me with this little towel and this
little bar of soap and he says, “Could you please show me where the showers are?” [laughs]. And
I said, “We were just there! Somehow that didn’t get communicated to you. I’m so sorry.” And I
said, “But, down here in the creek there’s a little pool and it’s far enough away you could sit
down there and do what you need to do.”
AW: So you talked a little bit about changes in student diversity. Similarly, for faculty and staff,
I mean, I’m not sure if this was a change that you noticed when you were there. You left
Skidmore in … 2010 and you’d been there for 18 years so … 92? Yeah, ’92. So, you know, just
… gender, cultural, and other diversity issues, as far as faculty and staff go. Anything there that
comes to mind that you want to share, particularly in the sciences?
SVH: So when I was in college in my Department of Botany, there was one woman faculty
member in the ’70s. She taught Zoology and I took it from her. And she and I met in the Albany
airport 40 years later, because she was from Albany, NY, and I didn’t know it! [laughs] Now
we’re really close. And she went through breast cancer too, and she was my role model for being
a female scientist. So, um … when I got to Skidmore there were … one, two … two of the tenure
track people were women and … um, maybe five were guys. Chemistry … I don’t think there
were any women chemists at the time. There were TAs — most of the TAs were women … I
would say all of the TAs were women! All four floors, the TAs were women. Um, right, so we
can do with less salary and we want to be Moms, and … so. But that changed, that definitely

�changed. I think there was a time there were more women faculty in Biology than men. In terms
of diversity, we had one Latinx … and that might have been it. Umm, and I don’t think that’s
changed since I’ve left. I don’t think there’s anyone there that I know of. ES might be different,
but …yeah, I know ES is different, I know they have two people of color. So, yeah again it’s that
pipeline, right? It’s that pipeline, that STEM pipeline. And, um, where did I just see … oh, the
whole organic regenerative farming movement is altering this. So there’s a farm nearby here
somewhere called Soul Fire Farm that is run by African American people for African American
people, to teach them how to farm. Think about that connection to slavery, right? So, they were
the ones doing the farming, right? And where did that disconnect happen? Because we shoved
them all into ghettos and cities where they couldn’t farm, or they were too poor to own land and
they couldn’t farm, or they were still indentured, …. So that shift is fascinating — that deserves
a PhD right there. But this farm is focused on bringing them through the pipeline, and that’s what
we have to do in the sciences as well.
And the science … what I’m seeing now is that the shift is away from molecular and cell
science, the microscopic level, and back to big ecosystems-based science. I mean, climate
change is forcing us there, right? And the more we’ve learned about fungi, I mean … fungi, my
babies, have exploded since Paul Stamets, right? So, I brought Paul Stamets to campus in 2008,
and it was Muriel Poston who had heard him speak at a botanical conference and said, “Sue, get
this guy here!” [laughs] And, I got huge backlash because he was not an academic. She didn’t
care because she saw he was doing science, but my department didn’t even frickin’ come to the
talk. Yeah. So that’s a little aside, but anyway. So we’re seeing this push and the fungi …
because we’re now going underground, right? So there’s always a frontier in science. So the
frontier while I was at Skidmore was into the cells, into the DNA, right? And now the frontier is,
we’ve gone to space, we’ve gone to the oceans [laugh], now the frontier’s beneath our feet. It is
soil. We know nothing about the soil. And our farming and agricultural practices, way back from
the fertile crescent in Mesopotamia, was wrong. To plow the earth destroyed all that mycorrhizal
fungal thread network. And all the carbon plants … I just learned this year! I was a botanist — I
just learned this year that plants are sending 40 percent of the sugars they make through
photosynthesis to the roots! We’re all above ground people, we just see what’s above ground,
right? “That’s a tree! Who cares about the roots! We know they’re there, okay!” No, 40 percent
of what’s manufactured, the manufacturing plant is, which is making the sugars that the rest of
life depends on, is being sent to the roots, and not to the roots but to the fungi and the bacteria in
the root system, the mycorrhizal connections. And that is why our carbon dioxide in the universe
is out of balance, right? 70 percent of carbon dioxide belongs in the soil. And because of … not
because of burning fossil fuels, that’s only 5 percent, but because of our agricultural practices,
where we till and we lay bare — you drove over here today, you saw bare fields, driving over
here today — we lay bare fields, that means there’s no microbial life in those fields, and if there
is any, it’s off gassing CO2 like crazy through respiration. That is where the CO2 is coming
from. That’s where the bulk of it is coming from. I’ve spent the last five years reading my head
off about this and studying this, because it ties my whole life together. And so … we need to stop
the fossil fuel emissions, right, to stop the source, one of the sources, from going up in the
atmosphere, but doing that doesn’t do anything with the carbon that’s already there. It’s going to
take another 800 years for that carbon to go somewhere. So, putting it back in the soil, within
two years, if we put two percent of the carbon, two percent, that’s all, back in the soil, we can
bring the parts per million back down to 350 parts per million within 10 years. We can reverse

�climate change in 10 years. And guess what? Our new president understands this. And this trend
into the soil, this new frontier, is happening fast. Within five years it’s happened. Normally it
takes … so I mentioned the first climate change report about excessive carbon dioxide, went to
President Johnson’s desk in 1965! I have known about it since then. I have been teaching about it
since then. That’s 50 years! And it took us that long, and it’s like kinda too late, right? But it’s
not too late, because this whole soil story is catching on like wildfire, and there are bills in state
legislatures and there are bills in Congress now and it’s just exciting. And guess what? It’s
because of the fungi!!!
AW: [laughs] So, as if you weren’t excited enough! [both laugh]. Um, you left Skidmore after 18
years and began yet another career. You’ve had a multi-career lifespan, which I think is very
fascinating, and you went to work on fungi with Evo-cative? Evocative?
SVH: Ecovative.
AW: Ecovative, excuse me. It’s a challenging name. So, I want you to tell me a little bit about
that, and maybe, it sounds like that sort of encompasses a lot of — it drew a common thread
through a lot of your experiences.

SVH: I’ll tell you how the transition happened, but just two days ago, I came full circle with that
company. I’m writing a book about it and I’m nearing …progress, nearing ending progress on it,
but two days ago I got up really early, 6:30, and I drove up to Merck Forest, and — I mentioned
Merck Forest before, up in Rupert, Vermont — a 3,000-acre preserve. And, I’m becoming the
new president of the board there in another couple of days. [laughs]
AW: Congratulations.
SVH: Thank you — my fifth career [laughs]. And I picked up the farm truck and I drove the
farm truck down to Troy to Green Island, where Ecovative is, to pick up their waste product,
which is spent oyster mushroom substrate that they’ve grown the new “My bacon” meat
alternative on. So, I’m holding in my hands this mushroom that I brought out of the woods, by
myself, in 2007 … brought it in to culture. That is now getting cloned into “myco-bacon,” “my
bacon” and being sold at Honest Weight Food Co-Op in Albany for six months, and is now
getting scaled nationally, in the next year, with a hundred million dollars of new investment. And
I’m holding this thing, this strain, … and saying, “Yeah, I knew you had potential!” [laughs]

AW: That’s great!
SVH: So … so the way I got there is just the best story, and it will be in the book, is in the book,
and it’s also in the New Yorker magazine article about Ecovative that came out on March … on
May 20th, 2013, called Farm and Function, and there’s a big part of that story. And also, this
story is also in Fungi Magazine — I can’t remember what year — it was a couple of years after
that. So, I’m a lucid dreamer and I’m studying dream … dreaming techniques with an
international dream teacher who’s written all the books, Robert Moss, who happens to live in
Albany. And I’m at one of his workshops up at Gore Mountain, and the message I get at one of
the exercises that we did, which was creating a synchronicity card deck, was “life is

�mushrooming.” And I picked my own card out of the deck, and he said, “If you pick your own
card, it’s serious business — you’d better do what the card says!”
AW: [laughs]
SVH: So I had … my question was — this was November 2005. My question was, “what is the
next creative phase of my life?” I was already feeling that Skidmore was dwindling. And, “what
is the next creative phase of my life?” Now maybe I’ve got one more shot at one more career.
That was my question and I picked my own card, “life is mushrooming,” that I’d written. And,
so I’m like, “Okay, what does that mean for me?” So, that Monday I called Paul Stamets in
Washington State and I said, “Paul, you don’t remember me from 30 years ago but we were in
4H together” and I said, “I want to take your Mychorestoration and Mycoremediation course on
how to heal ecosystems using fungi. That’s what your book is about. That’s what I want to do. I
have enough background; I can pull this off. It marries my environmentalism with my
mycology.” And he said, “Yeahhh … no, no, you’ve got to come take the beginner seminar
first.” I said, “Paul, come on, I have a graduate degree in mycology. I know how to culture
fungi.” He goes, “Yeahhh, but there’s some little tidbits you need to know. You need to come do
the beginner’s seminar.” So I go out there in March of 2006, borrow my sister-in-law’s car in
Portland, Oregon, drive up to the Olympic Peninsula, take the course — I’m practically teaching
lab, he says, “Sue, can you help out those people there? Sue, can you help out those people
there?” Thirty people! And I come home with 12 fungi that he gave us, in test tubes. And so I
went back three months later, in June, to take the other course, and came home with even more.
So I thought, “Ok, I’m going to now go out in the woods and build my own strain library.” And
David had given me a little cinderblock room in the back of the greenhouse [laughs] that I could
call home. We were actually doing our slug experiments in there, too, [laughs] so I’ve had it for
a while. And I said, “I just need a refrigerator please,” and so I got permission to be in
somebody’s refrigerator and I started collecting fungi and building a strain library. And, low and
behold, Karen sticks an article in … a year later, in June of 2007, on my door, at the end of the
semester: “RPI Grads Grow Mushroom Insulation Board.” And I walked past it for four days,
because I was busy with summer school or whatever, and finally on Friday I sat down and read it
and went “Oh my God! I have to meet these people!” [laughs] So I found them through the staff
directory, they are faculty members, and got hold of them and, in the meantime — my first email
with Eben, one of the two guys, was on Wednesday and we’d arranged for a call on Friday, and
on Thursday, in between, I went out to the North Woods with the Thursday Naturalists, who’s a
group of octogenarians, average age octogenarians, who I’ve been botanizing with for years —
and Skidmore woods is one their favorite places to come — and that particular day was in June,
we were going to look for the 33 species of ferns, and we found them all. And, not only did we
find them all, but I’m having this conversation with Win Bigelow, he says, “Sue, what do you
know about chaga?” and I said, “Well I’ve just learned about chaga because Jackie Donnelly
picked me up and took me to this thing growing on a tree and we had, and we…” you know, did
that. So, I’m talking to Win about the chaga and we get down to wayyy back in the corner of the
woods by the Middle School, and we are going into this one glade to find silver spleenwort. And
I’m at the end and the person in front of me is 96-year-old Sally Ingalls, with her walking stick
and her hand lens, and I’m looking at her and I’m going, “You’re my idol, you’re my idol! I’m
going to be you; I’m going to be you!” [laughs]. So I’m the last person in line and we’d just
talked about chaga and here’s this yellow birch and there’s a chaga mushroom right there! And

�it’s low on the tree — usually they’re up high, and it’s low! And so I had my little Canon Power
shot, and I knelt down and I’m looking at this chaga and it’s like, “Hmm, this looks like a portal,
there’s like a chunk of it over here and a chunk of it over on the other side and there’s like a little
black frame around in the middle — I’m going to just take a picture of this!” So I knelt down, I
looked through my camera, and this face appears! I’m going to show you the picture, I have it
upstairs. This face — you can put it in the article — this face appears and it’s this Indigenous
elder with big bushy eyebrows and a pointy chin and a beard and it passes through the portal in
my viewfinder, it just moves right through there, and I snapped and I got the face. And I’m like,
“Whooo, I’m getting chills! The fungi are talking to me! They’re giving me some big
information here!” On the heels of my dreaming thing and on the heels of going out to Paul,
who’s very dreamy, and has done his share of hallucinogenic tripping [laughs]…most of where
his ideas come from. And, I’m like, “Okay, I’m really getting a hit here!” And so I just, I just
keep it all to myself and I go up to the other people and they found the silvery spleenwort and we
look at it, dah dah dah, and I come home. That night I go for a walk at ten o’clock at night
because there’s a full moon and I… you know my husband and I had just had an argument about
determinate versus indeterminate tomatoes and which ones we’re going to plant and I said, “This
is ridiculous, I’m going for a walk.” And I’m going out to the cemetery, where it’s my favorite
place to walk, and there’s this snake on the side of the road doing this “death dance.” It’s a snake
I’ve never seen before but I instinctively know it’s a milk snake, it was broad white and brown
banded. I said, “I think you’re a milk snake but it doesn’t matter, you’re a snake and you’re
doing this thing and … straight up in the air and then falling on your head and straight up in the
air and falling on your head," I’m like, “this is kind of like … what is going on?” So then I just, I
said, “I’m leaving,” so I go to my tree, I’m hugging my tree and leaning on my tree and I’m
watching the moon and then “Okay, time to go back.” And I come back and I’m like a little bit
afraid to see where this snake is next. This snake … freaks me out. This snake has made itself
into the shape of a heart, which snakes don’t do. And I get down on my hands and knees to see
where the head and tail were. It had bit its tail with its head, and the middle of the snake was the
groove in the top of the heart. I’m like, “You shouldn’t be bending right there like that.” So this
is like a special message to Sue from snake medicine spirit … and I thought it was just, “Go
home and be loved, be loving to your husband, forget the stupid argument.” No, it wasn’t that. I
mean I did that anyway, but it wasn’t that. [laughs] This, you know, so snake medicine is about
shedding your old skin, transformation, new life ahead, all of this messaging coming through.
And we had seen a giant water snake on that field trip that day. And it wasn’t in Wilson Marsh, it
was way up on a rocky outcrop where it shouldn’t have been so that it caught our attention.
Anyway, so two snakes in one day, and then, so I'm like, “This message is, ‘be what you love.
Do what you love the most.’ This is what the snake is telling me.” So, that’s Thursday night. So
Friday morning I’m driving to Skidmore, I’m going to have this first phone call with Eben, this
cool guy, this cool young guy, and I’m like, “Oh, I’ve got to go see the snake.” [laughs] And the
snake wasn’t there, it was up this friend’s driveway, in a straight line, it had crawled out from
underneath a little juniper bush, and I’m like, I got down on my knees and, “Are you alive or are
you dead, snake?” It was dead and little ants were feeding on it. I’m like, “I witnessed your death
dance, you gave me a message before you died. [laughs] You’re telling me to do what I love.
This is pretty cool.”
So my first conversation, right out of the blocks, I just said, “Hi. Why are you using a
commodity, a food commodity and not a waste product?” [laughs] That’s the first words out of

�my mouth, because they were using … they had taken flour and water and pearlite, you know,
the white stuff in potting soil for holding water, and oyster mushroom spores they ordered off the
Internet to make this board. I said, “You shouldn’t be using food. This feeds people.” They go,
“We already switched. We already switched. We are using agricultural crop waste.” I said, “Oh
good.” I said, “So what are you looking for…” And they’re looking for … “in your strains? Like
what are you looking for?” And they’re, “We want it to be dense, fast growing and really
strong.” I’m like, “Do you know anything about fungi?” “No, we’re engineers.” I’m like, “And
you’re starting a company to grow fungi, is that correct?” “Yes, it is!” [laughs]. And so, I said,
“So how far are you along are you?” He said, “Well we filed the provisional patents and we have
some lawyers and we have business plans,” and I said, “Oh that’s good, because I don’t know
any of that stuff and nor do I want to. But I do know the part about the fungi and I’d be happy to
work with you.” And so by the end of an hour and a half call, …and I told him the whole story
about the snake and the chaga, because if he didn’t … if he balked at that then I didn’t want to
work with these guys. But he is a lucid dreamer too, so he was like on the edge of his seat on his
end of the phone line and I could tell. And like, “Okay, we can do this. We can marry our
interests here.” So I worked for them. I grew … so when I went upstairs to Bill Tomlinson, we
arranged a transfer of biological materials agreement between the two colleges, because they
were in the incubator at RPI still, and I grew their spawn for the first two years. So I grew all
their fungi, and I grew them with my strains, and … in our autoclave. [laughed] I processed them
in our autoclave and then I delivered them or they’d come up and pick them up. I taught them all
of their sterile technique and I taught them all the names, all the biology of the fungi, and I
mentored and mentored and mentored and mentored and mentored. For nothing! [laughs]
Because I’m a teacher, right? I kick myself — if I had any business sense whatsoever, I would
have charged them for all of this information. [laughs]

AW: You would have been a partner. [laughs]
SVH: I would have been a full-fledged third partner. How dumb was I? Where are my spirit
guides now, like, “You’re supposed to be helping me here!” [laughs] So anyway, I gave it all for
free, and … whatever, I’ve never been about money in my life, ever, in anything I’ve done. In
fact, every … of the four jobs I’ve had has been the trail-blazing position. I’ve been the trail
blazer and I’ve left and the next person makes two or three times what I made. So it’s not, it’s
not what I’m here for on the planet.
AW: Right.

SVH: So anyway, this story got better and better. So, I’m still teaching, so this is 2007 to 2010.
I’m still growing their stuff, teaching them, engaging our students, and then … 2008 we applied
for our first EPA grant. And they tried once on their own and didn’t get it [laughs] and so they
called me up and they said, “Ahh, we need your gray hairs.” [laughs] And, so I was the PI on the
first EPA grant, and then we got a Skidmore student, Dawn Harfmann, Tom Harfmann’s
daughter, from IT, and she and I worked on it for six months and then she came and worked with
us, upon graduating. And now I got Gordon MacPhearson to do the USDA grant the following
summer. So I was still using Skidmore facilities, Skidmore students, and it was just a wonderful
situation. And then, I … we got the grant, so I had to go do the grant, right? So I had to take a
leave of absence, unpaid, because we didn’t get sabbaticals as TAs. And so that was all arranged,

�and I went in January of 2009 through the summer and did the grant. I got paid a little more than
I would have teaching kids at Skidmore, that was fine, so that’s good. And then I get back on
campus and the first faculty meeting in the fall of 2009 and Phil gets up and says, “You know
we’re in … we’ve had an economic recession for 2007, 8 and 9 and we just have to lay some
people off — we have to get rid of 70 people.” I don’t know if you remember that?
AW: I do.

SVH: Yeah. And he said, “But, we’re going to be able to do it voluntarily with a little bit of a
bonus incentive for getting out the door.” It was a great … it was a big bonus, as it turns out.
“And, in order to apply for this voluntarily you have to be at least 55 and you have to have
worked here for 15 years. So I was turning 55 the next month and I had 15 years, no I had 17
years in. I had 17 years in then. “Ahhhh, spirit, you told me it’s time to shift. Ahh, this is like a
pretty graceful way to do it with a little extra cash on the way out the door. Am I supposed to do
this?” “Yeah, you’d better apply.” [laughs] There were six of us in the Bio Department who
could have applied. I was the only one who did, and it was competitive — more than 70 people
applied. So, I got it, and I still smile at the grace … this graceful transition that was no stress.
And so the message for me in my whole healing journey from the breast cancer has been to listen
to your heart more. I mean, I get to see my heart beat every day, because I’m missing one, and so
it … you know, in academia we are so in our heads all the time, it’s like, balance your head and
your heart, people. And when you do, things are easy, they’re not hard and challenging, the spirit
is on your side. They want this abundance for you, they want this thing that you’re on the earth
to do, for you. Stay out of the way! Stay out of the way! And when you stay out of the way it is
fun! It’s like magic! You get snakes doing dances. And you, I mean, you meet chaga men in the
woods, and … it’s just beautiful! And so that was my fourth transition to this new thing I’d never
done called business!
AW: [Laughs]
SVH: And it turns out that I was, like, teaching all the science there, mentoring all these people.
I mean, we grew slowly at first and then it was like, boom! Up to 60 employees. During the
recession, we were up to 60 employees, which was pretty … Paul Tonko came and cut our
ribbon. [laughs] And so this company is coming into its own now. We were, 10 years before its
time in growing mushroom packaging to replace Styrofoam. Completely compostable, 100
percent plants and fungus, no waste product, throw it in your garden, throw it in your mulch,
thing. That’s taken a decade to catch on and now it’s really catching on. And it’s now, all that
has been licensed to a company in California. They don’t even do it any more here. So now
they’ve moved on to alternative meats, and that is going to be mind blowing and successful too.
So.
AW: Um, Sue, we have been chatting for quite a while and it’s been wonderful, it’s been fun.
I’m just, I just want to ask you if there’s any … we’ve only touched on so many things, but if
there’s anything that I didn’t mention that you feel is particularly essential to mention now, this
is the moment! [laughs] You’ve had a very colorful, very innovative career, and a big chunk of it
spent at Skidmore for the enrichment of the college and the student community. I just want to be
sure I haven’t forgotten anything that you’ll think about later and say, “Oh gosh, I wish I’d

�mentioned this.”

SVH: Well I feel really honored that I’ve gotten to share what’s kept me really excited and
engaged in this retirement. And I retired from Skidmore in 2016, so I didn’t really retire until
then. And I was a healing touch practitioner at the office of Ecovative. I saw 60 employees on
my massage table. They realized the benefits of caring for ourselves. And so a big, one of the big
things I did there, and I think I did at Skidmore and I think I did everywhere I’ve been … “Oh
hello helicopter!” [laughs] [loud helicopter flying overhead] Um, I’m just going to wait … So
one of the biggest things I’ve done all throughout my career is care for people. And, I miss the
students tremendously, every one of them. You know, I had a big transition, a BIG transition
when I went to teach in Environmental Science. Because I came, …you know, you gravitate to
people who are most like you, right? So I was a top A student, I mean I was the top grade in my
class all throughout my career. And so I gravitated to those kids, the super performers in our
labs, and I took care of the other people, but like I really gave a little extra encouragement, I
wanted them to really succeed.
There was one other student I want to mention, that was transformative for me. She had cerebral
palsy, and she was also the daughter of a staff member. I had her for two semesters and … I was
told, “Do what you can to accommodate her.” She could barely walk and I had to have a bed in
the lab. And in the fall lab we were doing the bee experiments outside, and I said, “I’m going to
find a way to get you into the woods to paint bees.” And at the time I had inherited my mom’s
old Dodge K-car station wagon, which was kind of on its last legs, so I put a mattress in the back
of the station wagon, and we got her down the elevator and got her into the back of the car and I
drove her out into the woods. And it was a time where the roads were in good-enough shape, it
was down where the new student dorms are now, it was down in that section of the woods, and
the roads had not eroded, where I could drive her right to where we were doing the experiments.
And then for the next semester her lab was in the prep room in the Plant Biology class, and I
spent hundreds and hundreds of hours … digital photography in the microscope was new, and I
put the camera in the microscope and I scanned every single microscope slide that we looked at
the whole semester, at low magnification, middle magnification and high magnification so that
she could see absolutely everything that the students saw. And I filmed all of this, so that took
me hours of my own time, and then I … while she’s lying in bed I’m talking her through it, so I
taught another three-hour lab to her every week individually. She invited me to her PhD
graduation party … where she walked, was walking beautifully. PhD in neuroscience so that she
could understand her illness! And … it was at the Parting Glass down in Saratoga, and I brought
my whole family with me. I said, “Kids, you’ve got to meet this woman. You’ve got to meet this
woman.” So those are the things that you teach for. And … yeah, I miss the students.
AW: That’s an awesome story, and very moving, Sue. I want to thank you for sharing that, I
want to thank you for being a good teacher and a great colleague for many years at Skidmore. I’ll
sign off now.

END

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