Thursday, January 31, 2008

Haverford Architectural Salvage

I'm a big fan of old buildings, and enjoy visiting 'architectural salvage' stores that stock old windows, doors, sinks, lamps -- stuff that's been saved from the wrecking ball.

So when the College started renovating the President's victorian home at 1 College Circle I asked what would become of the many old windows, some of which are (to my eyes at least) just gorgeous. Could they be saved?

Yes, as it turned out, and they have been saved; Facilities put them in cold storage:




Many different shapes & sizes. Question now is, what do we do with them?


Alum Jim Friedman '67 points out that it's very very very very (get it?) difficult to build antique sashes into an existing structure, so I suppose their appeal is more along the lines of the aesthetic and, for us Fords, sentimental. (There, I said it.) Hang a sash on your living room wall and start a conversation. Think of the Presidential eyes that have looked through these windows and over to campus! The Vision Thing!


So how should we dispose of them? First come, first serve? Raffle at Alumni Weekend? Gifts/awards associated with HC annual giving? Dumpster? Sell them?


Also available: the old balustrades from the back of the Morris Infirmary:



To refresh your memory, they used to run along the roof line:


Look forward to your thoughts.

-CM

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Movie People II: Luke Wilson



Come now more folks from Hollywood, this time scouting locations. Writer/Director Mike Million is looking for a college campus on which to shoot scenes for his film 'Tenure' which stars Luke Wilson as a prof who's trying to lock in a slot at Hypothetical Miniversity.

Mike and his guys -- who, I must say, could not have been more polite and un-Hollywood -- dropped by Monday and snapped endless photos as I showed them around. Many spots got a polite "nice" (= yawn) while others prompted whispers, which I took to be a sign of interest. They seemed to love the Phillips Wing and Aryeh Kosman's office; they seemed to love Aryeh (who doesn't).

"Central casting? Get me a philosopher!"

Mike says it'd be a 10-day shoot in March and the College would not be identified; a proposal (including script) to come.

Not sure whether their project is a good fit for us: in my experience as an extra (yep, that's me in line at a restaurant in the 1987 classic 'Mannequin' starring Andrew McCarthy) moviemaking is a high-impact process that can be pretty disruptive. Fun to watch the sausage getting made, though.

-CM

Movie People I: Russell Crowe


Betcha didn't know that actors Russell Crowe (above) and Ben Affleck were Fords, didja? Well...they aren't! But it looks like they are going to play Fords on the big screen.

They've both been signed to star in "State of Play", director Kevin Macdonald's ("The Last King of Scotland") tale of a muckraking DC journalist (Crowe) who takes on evil powerbrokers. Affleck plays a pol.

The production company has been ordering HC swag from the bookstore that'll be used to dress up Crowe's "apartment", and just last week the guys on the cricket team posed for a shot that presumably will have Crowe (whose character played the game while a student here) photoshopped into place.


All that said, let's see what happens -- had I written this post last fall, you'd have seen a photo of Brad Pitt up top of this entry.

Last fictional filmic Ford I can recall was Twin Peaks' Agent Dale Cooper.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

What Should Customs Week Be?

A number of people on campus are asking how Customs Week might be enhanced. Hoping to establish something a 'baseline in time' that could inform my understanding of how Customs Week has evolved over the past 30 years, I queried my classmates via our Class of 82 Google group and invited their recollections.

Many remember an experience heavy on the social side and light --very -- on the academics, though the substance was occasionally dark: "I had a meeting with the head of the French Department to discuss the dismal results of a French placement test I'd taken (he suggested that I never set foot in a French class and consider changing colleges)."

I'd welcome your thoughts about Customs Week via the Comment function; to prime the pump I'm pasting in thoughts offered by BMC 82's Roz Cummins. (It's worth noting that many of us feel as close to these Mawrters as we do to our fellow Fords, so tight was the relationship between the two colleges.)

I remember the swimming test that was given during customs week and being told (perhaps erroneously) that it was because so many Princeton grads died on the Titanic that we had to take this test. I was shocked by the Lion “spitting” water into the BMC pool.

Most of my memories of Customs Week are of a horrible square dance in the BMC gym and having to perform stupid skits, but I also remember attending a presentation at Haverford given by faculty doing 5 minute descriptions of their courses. Wyatt McGaffey got up and said that most people think that Anthropology is “something to do with apes.” That was all he said. It made me want to take his course.

I think that Customs Week was also the week that I stayed up camping outside of Founders Hall all night so that I could sign up for a specific Haverford course. At this point I have no memory of what class I thought was worth staying up all night to get into. I just remember hanging out with Judd Nelson since he was the only person there that I knew because he was in my Customs Group.

Whenever I see footage on the news of people camped outside Fenway to get Redsox tickets I remember camping out in front of Founders.

The one happy memory I have of Customs Week was meeting some friends during Popsicle Night. Mostly I just liked being outdoors at night ­ something that I associate a lot with college. I’ve never spent so much time outdoors at night before that or since then. I remember walking between campi at all hours ­ sometimes alone, sometimes not, sometimes feeling fearful, sometimes not. I can remember going to Dunkin Donuts at one or two in the morning with my beau and having Wrong Way Wooten (the guy who worked there who also rode his bicycle backwards) ride his bike around the parking lot while singing “Chances Are” along with the 8-track tape player that was strapped to his bike. I once saw Wrong Way performing in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade. A friend who stayed in Philly told me that Wrong Way died a few years later from AIDS.

Great. Now I want a French Cruller. Proust had his madeliene, I have my French Cruller. I don’t think I could even force myself to eat one of those things at this point! I guess I’ll have to go find out...

Oh baby.

So what are your recollections of Customs Week? How could it have better prepared you for, or more accurately foreshadowed, what was to follow? (And for those who are into social networking and may be wondering "Why are you using a Google group...doesn't HC offer decent networking for its alums?" the solution is coming in Q4 08...stay tuned...)

For now, though, feel free to comment away.

-CM

Monday, January 7, 2008

The College Returns: 2008

All new Haverford employees have to learn the slogan "The College is Never Closed."

Sure, a few feet of snow might slow things down, but almost every student and most faculty are within walking distance of campus and even if commuting employees can't get here, classes
continue.

"Vacations" are vacations for the students, but the work of the College goes on 51 weeks a year. However, in the week between Christmas and New Year's Day, the place is as close to shut down as it ever is.

The Security Office in the Gardner Center remains on duty 24/7 and a few lonely faculty and administrators huddle in semi-heated offices. You can be sure that some folks in Founders were opening envelopes to record contributions from alums with one eye on the calendar and the other on their IRS forms! But for the only time all year, Magill Library is uninhabited all week, no one is working out in the Fitness Center and except for a few international students, all the young Fords are elsewhere.

Over the years, occasional activities have livened up this "dead week." One cold New Year's Eve some time ago, a lone campus wanderer thought he had encountered Brigadoon -- men in kilts and women in gowns dancing in Founders while a bagpiper's squeals announced the arrival of the ceremonial haggis.

However, on close inspection, this was no annual apparition of a time and place far away but a more prosaic party of the local St. Andrew's Society which had somehow managed to rent Founders Great Hall for traditional Scottish New Year's festivities.

The oddest year-end/ year-beginning ritual at Haverford occurred in the 1970s when Alumni Field House still featured a dirt track and infield. Obsessed runners from all over the world descended on Haverford to take part in one of the few "48-hour races" anywhere.

Dozens of people circled the 1/7-mile dirt track 18 hours a day (the rules specified that contestants had to sleep or at least rest six hours out of every 24). Many spectators came to see this reprise of the 1920s craze for all-night bicycle races.

The contestants did have to stop occasionally to....well, you get the idea... and they usually did stop for that purpose, though once in a while....

They also had to eat. Support teams brought victuals which the runners could consume while in full stride.

Therein lay the downfall of this unique event. In time, culinary provisions became more and more elaborate. Huge picnic hampers arrived and created considerable debris for College staff to clean up. Then, some enterprising folks started barbecuing chickens and other delicacies in corners of the cavernous old barn.

The College wasn't sure it liked that. It would be pretty hard to burn down the Field House, sure, but a few dozen fires in its major athletic facility blazing all day and night didn't seem quite right.

While the administration pondered this dilemma, fate took a hand. The Field House was scheduled for renovation, and the new floor was to be polyurethane, replacing the finely-ground dirt which still resides in older alums' lungs and athletic gear. Fires just wouldn't do.

The race was cancelled.

Considerable outcry came from the extreme sports crowd. The College was attacked as "Un-Quakerly" in a Philadelphia newspaper op-ed,though no one could find references
to 48-hour races or barbecuing chickens in the core writings of George Fox, William Penn, or Rufus Jones.

Haverford's back in full swing this week. Staff can't find an ideal parking place unless they get in early. There's a basketball game in the Gooding Arena tonight. While the main dorms remain closed, HCA houses winter athletes, students with classes at Penn, and those from far away. Offices are open.

We don't know if ghosts of bagpipers or ultra-marathoners--or more substantial figures--flitted across campus last week. We're content to let one week a year keep its secrets. Haverford moves on to 2008, with both predictable rhythms of the academic year and no doubt undreamed-of adventures and challenges ahead. It's good to be back.

--Greg Kannerstein '63

Friday, January 4, 2008

Our Man In Madagascar


This just in from Robert Strauss '78:


After five years as Country Director for the Peace Corps in Cameroon, my family and I relocated in August 2007 to Madagascar where I have started a management consulting firm. Over New Year's, I traveled to the town of Fianarantsoa to see Karen Schoonmaker Freudenberg (BMC 1978) who has been living there for the last ten years.

Karen has been working to keep the "Micheline," a rubber-wheeled train developed by Michelin in the 1930s and now considered to be the world's most unusual operating train, from joining the ranks of Madagascar's other extinct species. We had made it 18 of the scheduled 21 kilometers when the Micheline's clutch burnt out. We hoofed the last three kilometers before joining our families and the US Ambassador for lunch.

Regards,
Robert Strauss
Antananarivo, Madagascar

Robert confesses that when they met up for the first time in 30 years, Karen didn't remember ever knowing him, despite his "once sporting an afro that was bigger than Sly Stone's."