Missing Mac
It's a sad day for this old forester. I have just read of the
death of Professor Emeritus William (Mac) Macconnell. Most of
my fondest memories of UMASS are of Mac's classes, field trips, and
sharing a beer at Barcelotti's once in a while. He made forestry
come alive for me and I'm sure other students of the fifties. One
of my first classes with Mac had many short quizzes on which I was
recieving grades of 88. After about the fourth one I told Mac
I didn't believe he knew any grade but 88. Mac gave me a slight
grin and the next quiz came back with an 87. It dawned on me
he was prodding for a bit more effort. Mac was not only a good
teacher but a teller of some of life's stories; the timber cruiser
who always carried a pistol hoping to run into a bear, the homeless
boy who wandered into a logging camp and found a home taking care of
the horses, the dishonest logger "who was so crooked he had to
screw his socks on in the morning" and a few others I think I'll
not repeat in an open letter. Thanks a lot, Mac for all you taught
me, including to always sozzle the oolong formosa three times.
Robert Duckworth ’57
Tucker, Georgia
The Fenway Dome?
The 1967 season certainly was a memorable one, capped off by a thrilling
world-series. As the “Ball
Game” article mentions the cold weather
at Fenway, I thought of several other northern cities that have ballparks
with retractable roofs and heat: Seattle and Milwaukee and Minnesota
(dome).
Here in Phoenix, the ballpark has a retractable roof and cooling system because of the oppressive sunshine and heat. The Phoenix ballpark does not have a heating system. I guess time would tell if Boston area fans will have a baseball park with a retractable roof and heating system. But as you know, in April and May, many times Boston has colder temperatures than even Anchorage, Alaska. This is due to Boston being near the cold north Atlantic.
How’s this for a headline: A new stadium for the Red Sox will be built in the suburbs of Boston and the team keep same name and increase the capacity.
George Taseos ’75
Phoenix, Arizona
Kelley Legacy Grows
Thank you very much for the Kelley
legacy article, seen on page 51 of
your Spring 2007 magazine! My family and I enjoyed the article very
much, and we are all proud of the Kelley Family/UMass relationship.
However, there were omissions in the article, such as mention of my
mother, Mary Kelley, as a 1950 graduate, and my brother, Kevin Kelley,
as a 1991 graduate of UMass. Another brother, Mike, attended UMass
from 1977-1979.
I should also mention my father, Jack Kelley, did attend UMass for one year,
but had to leave when the war started. He was needed at home to help his family
farm the land to support the war effort. He is the one seen on the horse in the
article.
Both my parents have passed on now, but I know they would have been very happy
and proud to see the Kelley legacy story in the UMass magazine. Thank you.
Patricia (Kelley) Lewis
South Deerfield
As an added note to the above: my brother pointed out that there is an error in the caption of the photo of my father, Jack, on the horse. Jack is the son of John Kelley, not Patrick. Patrick was Jack's grandfather and the originating owner of the Kelley farm.
Losing Littlefield
As a fervent baseball fan, I found this article about the sports program
at UMass interesting and informative.
But, as a Pittsburgh Pirate fan, I was disappointed to find no mention of one of the sport management program’s most successful alumni. Dave Littlefield was appointed vice president and general manager of the Pirates in July, 2001.
Like other general managers of small market teams, Dave has had a challenging task in the dysfunctional field of major league baseball, but with the assistance of revenue sharing it appears the Pirates at least have an opportunity this year to have a respectable finish and perhaps even a modest profit. He’s a good guy who enjoys the respect and affection of Pittsburghers.
James Hollister ’59
Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania
Better Prostate Testing
In a previous letter I discussed the false Prostate Significant Antigen
(PSA Test) caused by ingesting flaxseed oil.
A new test Early Protein Cancer Antigen (EPCA-2), the Insulin-like Growth Factor (IFG-1), and the C Reactive Protein tests provide more precise measurement to predict incidence of prostate cancer.
These tests are combined ‘trip-wire’ indications of males requiring the painful needle biopsy.
Perhaps this information can be forward to the UMass Medical School and the UMass Department of Public Health for further investigation.
Walter J. Feszchak ’73
Cupertino, California
Trashing Marxism
A letter to the editor in the last issue stated that Marxism has a
place. Indeed it does-right in the garbage can of history. Although
Marx's ideas on personal freedom bear some looking at, there's no doubt
as to his influence on the destruction and carnage of the 20th century.
Part of Marx's rants include diatribes against the "bourgeois." That's what we Americans would call the middle class, which is a vital part of the backbone of this great nation. Mao Zedong took Marx's ideas to heart. So much in fact that he slaughtered millions during the Cultural Revolution. His target? You guessed it, the "bourgeois." Cut out the middle so you only have total power at the top, nothing in the middle, then everyone else at the bottom. This is Marxist theory in practice.
The writer also states that there is no system suggested by Marx's writings. I suggest he read the Communist Manifesto. If he can't detect a system in that book, then he needs to read more closely. If no system was proposed, how was it that all of the Communist butchers of the 20th century mirror each other so closely when implementing Marxism? Jesus said, "by the fruits ye shall know them." Let's look at Marxism's fruits:
Soviet Union(1924-1953)-20,000,000 dead
China(1949-1975)-40,000,000 dead(some say as much as 65 million dead)
Tibet(1950-present)-1,200,000 dead at the hands of Chinese communists
Cambodia-2 million dead
Eastern Europe-1 million dead
Latin America-1.7 million dead
Who knows how many of Marx's "bourgeois" are wasting away in Gulags in present day China, North Korea, and Cuba? To say that Christianity exceeds a track record like this is laughable.
Let's also look at Christianity's fruits.
How about the calendar? You wouldn't have our current calendar if it weren't for the Catholic Church. In fact, Sunday wouldn't even be the first day of the week if it weren't for the Church. Our entire legal system in Western culture is based on the 10 Commandments. How about education? At one time the only schools that the poor could attend were Catholic schools. he University system itself has the Catholic Church as its mother. How about when the monks of the middle ages kept western learning and literacy alive when barbarians and Muslims threatened to wipe out Europe? How about all the hospitals and orphanages which the Catholic Church had when nobody else did? How about the priceless art and architecture inspired by, you guessed it again, the Catholic Church. How about modern science? Again, Jesuit astronomers were the pioneers of modern science. I suggest you read How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization. This just touches the surface of how profoundly Christianity has influenced the world. Even the idea of charity itself, on a societal scale, began as a Christian idea.
Marxism views Christianity as a great enemy. Why else have all of the Marxist totalitarian dictatorships spent so much time trying to wipe it out?
The first true socialistic society was the early Christian Church. The Acts of the Apostles talks about how "everything was shared in common" and supplies were doled out according to need.
The fruits of Marxism equal death.
The fruits of Christianity equals life and culture.
Scott Durant ’92
China, Maine
Sport Management Appreciation
Just a quick note to thank you for the fine article on the UMass sport
management alumni who are working in baseball. I loved the baseball
card that you made up of them—what a creative touch!
Lisa Masteralexis ’87
Head, Department of Sport Management
UMass Amherst
Winning Praise
To the editor and staff of UMass Amherst. Your spring
2007 was a winner. Keep it up! Won't get back to Amherst
for the '58 fiftieth gala next year, and will miss not going. Kitty
and I are well and enjoying Arizona but it sure looks like a long trip
to return. I wish all the best to my fellow Ch. E. graduates.
Rolfe Chase ’58
Prescott, Arizona
Musical Clarity
I would like to correct and clarify a statement made by Mark
Pattison '98G in his Input letter regarding the Morris Museum's Murtogh D. Guinness
collection of mechanical musical instruments and automata. These
were featured in Grace Friary's fine article about the collection's
curator Ellen Snyder-Grenier '80. [Winter 2007 In
Perfect Harmony] Mr.
Pattison takes issue with the statement that the collection is "the
only one of its kind in the Western Hemisphere." He notes
the extensive collection of music boxes at the Musical House of Wonder
in Wiscasset, Maine. While those holdings do indeed exceed the
number of music boxes contained in the Guinness collection, they do
not comprise the extraordinary level of concentrated quality. But,
more importantly, the House of Wonder does not have the fabulous automata
component represented in the Guinness collection (over 100 pieces)
that is so essential to appreciating the first chapter of the on-demand,
re-playable entertainment industry with which we are so familiar today.
Steven H. Miller
Executive Director
Morris Museum
Morristown, New Jersey
Quabbin Fiction
I am writing in response to the letter from William
Hardy '41 published
in the Spring issue. Although he is interested in factual information,
I would like to recommend a book of fiction by J. D. Landis. This
book (oddly) has been published under two different titles: The Taking;
and Artist of the Beautiful. The book is the story of a teenage
girl who spends the summer after her freshman year at Mt. Holyoke as
a tutor and companion of a 12 year old boy, son of a village preacher
in one of the towns scheduled to be flooded as part of the reservoir
project. The story is both touching and gripping and has a few
Amherst scenes in it.
Tim ’76 and Una Anderson
Gaithersburg, Maryland
Not Just for Babies
I loved reading about Rachel
Keen's work. In addition to her
research, she is a gifted teacher. Back in 1973 when she taught
child psychology to classes of 500 in Mahar, she developed critical
thinking skills in undergraduate brains by regularly describing research
studies and challenging us to identify unfounded assumptions and methodological
errors. She enthusiastically rewarded critical thinking and analysis! These
analytical skills have been invaluable to me throughout my life.
Holly Hendricks '80
Wakefield
UMass Alumni on the Winning Team
I have to commend you for the excellent presentation that was made
in the recent issue of the alumni magazine pertaining to baseball as
it relates to my fellow graduates. I was very impressed and so timely!
Well, with the present Red Sox bullpen, they should come very close
to another championship season. Let’s hope so—number one! I read this
issue cover to cover with so many interesting stories.
Nancy Blomquist ’49
Shrewsbury
Unbearably Correct
I read with interest the letters from Neal
Cadorette ’90 and R. Edward Price ’91 protesting
the appointment of Marxist economics professor Mwangi
wa Githinji. I do not agree with their remonstrations, as I believe
that his worth as a professor is best assessed by his students and not
those who would pre-judge him based upon his political beliefs. That
said, when I read their letters, I was reminded of the leftist atmosphere
that pervades UMass, and which, so entwined with political correctness,
is almost unbearable. Like R. Edward Price, I too hesitate in writing
a check to the alumni fund.
I attended UMass in the Reagan years, when you could barely walk through the Student Union without being accosted by some activist. Monday it was the anti-nuclear army, blocking my path, their faces made up like skeletons. Tuesday it was the PETA person, damning me for my choice of Hatch cheeseburgers. Wednesday it was some radical wearing a giant papier mache Mardi Gras head in the image of Reagan, murmuring about who knows what from the depths of the effigy. Thursday it was a self-righteous classmate trying to make me feel guilty because I grew up in Winchester. I almost looked forward to Friday, when I could see the conservative person with the pictures of the fetuses. (Boy, do I miss UMass!)
It got so bad that I started doing things like taking my Hatch cheeseburger upstairs to the health foods collective and eating it there, reveling in the expressions of “ew” from the hacky-sackers. To stymie my fellow liberal editors of the Collegian, I joined the Republican Club. There I was, with my little Mohawk and ripped Army jacket, sitting down and talking Star Wars.
But an odd thing happened. Initially when I joined the Republican Club, I did so with great mockery. But as I began to attend their meetings, I found that I got a worse reaction from the liberals around me. Sure, the Republicans looked askance at my choice of clothing, and some suspected my ruse, but the liberals were far worse. They were obsessed with whether I was actually a member of the Republican Club. Jokes turned into taunts turned into outright challenges. I was bullied at parties; people interrupted me while I ate my meat-laden meals. Other people came up to me and said, conspiratorially, “You can’t be,“ or “I know you’re smarter than that.” I was routinely asked to explain myself.
Well, I didn’t, and I haven’t, since 1984. And I won’t.
I will say this, however. No one on the liberal side wanted to hear what I had learned from the Republicans. The liberals only wanted me to tell them that the women were Stepford wives and the men Stepford husbands. No one wanted to hear what I heard close up: That the Republicans, more than anything else, were incredibly angry. But their anger, I noticed, was different from the liberal anger. The liberal anger was intellectual, luxurious. The Republican anger was targeted, grasping. It was the anger of people whose expression was shunted at every turn. It scared me, quite frankly. And so I learned of the unique rage that results when one is censored. When you try to censor people, people become reactive and hurt other people for no good reason. Ideas are lost entirely. History supports that.
At that time, my political views were left of center. They still are (though my hair is more evenly styled). But I have never forgotten the experience with the Republican Club, as it has allowed me to recognize that there’s an enormous ideological imbalance at UMass that needs to be addressed.
I urge members of the UMass community to read an article by Emory University professor Mark Bauerlein that appeared in the November 12, 2004 Chronicle of Higher Education, “Liberal Groupthink is Anti-Intellectual.” In that article, he says, “conservatives and liberals square off in public, but on campuses, conservative opinion doesn't qualify as respectable inquiry. You won’t often find vouchers discussed in education schools or patriotism argued in American studies. Historically, the boundaries of scholarly fields were created by the objects studied and by norms of research and peer review. Today, a political variable has been added, whereby conservative assumptions expel their holders from the academic market. A wall insulates the academic left from ideas and writings on the right.”
Maybe we should start all over with Stephen Tallentyre’s summation of Voltaire: ‘I may not agree with what you say but I will fight to the death your right to say it.’
Mary Cresse ‘86
Melrose
UMass As Arboretum
I am very interested in educating the campus community about an exciting
campus-wide project involving the Landscape
Architecture Department and The
Alumni Association.
I am a graduate student with the Landscape Architecture Department,
and am working with Professor Jack Ahern, Dean of the Department and
head of our Campus Arboretum. An arboretum is simply a collection of
trees, mostly of some ornamental, educational, or ecological value,
that is preserved and documented for educational purposes. Much like
a botanical garden, trees in an arboretum are labeled and accessioned
(into a botanical database), and the collection is usually open to
the public.
The entire UMass campus, is, in essence, an arboretum,
with hundreds of unusual trees of great historic and botanical significance
planted throughout the landscape. Some specimens are state champions
because of their magnificent size, and some have great sentimental
value as class or memorial trees. The arboretum, in fact, is officially
the Frank A Waugh Arboretum. Professor
Waugh was a distinguished professor of landscape architecture here
in the early 1900's, as well as a greatly influential figure in the
US Forest Service (there is currently a map of some self-guided arboretum
“walking tours” at the Visitor’s Center).
Most of the mature trees you see around campus were specially selected
over the last century to enhance this arboretum, and some originals
(and their offspring) that were planted by past presidents and professors
of UMass—back when it was the Massachusetts Agricultural College—still
flourish today.
Many trees were labeled with metal tags years ago, but the labels are
in poor condition or the trees have "outgrown" them. Many
trees are not listed in the campus arboretum database; these trees
need to be documented and labeled. As well, many trees have died over
the years, and many new trees have been planted. These fluctuations
in our campus landscape need to be documented to insure the educational
value of this “living museum” for years to come.
To accomplish these goals and others, public awareness of our arboretum
and its educational and aesthetic value must be generated.
Most importantly, perhaps, is that the Alumni Association has awarded
the Landscape Architecture Department with a grant that allows us to
continue working towards our goals. This grant has allowed me to begin
to accomplish the goals listed above, under the supervision of Jack
Ahern.
We can use all the help we can get, and the Association’s contribution
has truly "jump-started" our arboretum work. In return
for their generosity, we want to bring them good publicity and continue
to encourage an Arboretum-Alumni partnership.
The Alumni Association realizes the tremendous impact our UMass landscape has on students, and in turn, alumni. Landscape features such as the Campus Pond, Durfee Garden and the giant beech trees , and The Class Memorial Garden by the Fine Arts Center, etc, are all given life by a unique tree palette that was chosen for its aesthetic and horticultural value. These landscapes remain in students’ hearts and minds for years, and many people—not just landscape architects of plant science students—are curious to know “what kind of tree is that”, especially when the tree is in bloom or boasts striking fall color.
I think the readers of your magazine—both students and faculty—will
be curious to find out more about this project, and more about the
trees that form the armature of our campus. People have been especially
curious as I have been installing new labels on trees around campus,
and am often asked what it is I’m doing. Perhaps, in the future, we
will be able to develop a forum in which students can participate in
ongoing projects.
Publicity for our campus arboretum, and the beneficial partnerships
that such publicity may generate, are essential for its “rebirth” in
the awareness of current students.
Jill Weissman
MLA student, Department of Landscape Architecture
Coddling Can Kill
I read with great interest "In Search
of Fairer Tests" (Winter, 2007), by Prof. Amanda Walker Johnson.
In her piece she writes that she can "make no sense" of standardized
tests, which are "unequal,” “unfair,” and result in “reinforcing
and justifying” the treatment of students as disposable. She praises
“activist” anthropology and indicates she wants to be involved in public
policy “and perhaps testifying.”
After graduation from UMass in 1968 I entered flight training with the US Navy. Dr. Johnson may be horrified to learn that the US Armed Forces adhere strictly to standardized testing because to not do so has proven to kill people by producing less than fully qualified aircrew. After flying in the Navy and as a civilian for over 35 years I have to say that Dr. Johnson has no idea what she is talking about.
I have to say that although one may be able to slide through life in such soft fields as Activist Anthropology, the real world, which includes aviation and other hard disciplines, cannot exist without the testing she opposes. To assert otherwise is insupportable and destructive.
That UMass now coddles this nonsense is disappointing.
Ken Sherman ’68, ’75G
North Grafton
Dear Grace Friary,
I read your article "In
Perfect Harmony" and strongly disagree with you and Ms. Snyder-Grenier
that " in 18th and 19th centuries..... . Some people lived nearly
an entire lifetime rarely hearing music." The fact is that pianos
and harpsichords and other instruments were as common as iPods. We
are the people that are deprived. Almost no one of my generation or
the generations following me know how to make live music.
I spent my summers on a family farm without electricity when I was
young and almost every evening we sang to a guitar or some other
musical instrument.
Your article was very interesting and I thank you for taking the time to write it.
Guy Yagunoff ’75G
San Francisco, California
Stay at Home Moms—the Hardest Job of All
Joanne, first of all thank you for defending me and all "Stay
at Home Moms", but I felt that I should write in to clarify that "identity
theft" were not Charles Creekmore's words but actually my own.
After being in the corporate world for 10 years and devoting so much of life and energy to my career, I experienced an abrupt change when I chose to stay home. Overnight, my responsibilies shifted from wearing a business suit, driving a company car, having a title on a business card, overseeing 100+ employees and earning a paycheck to caring for a newborn baby, being up all hours of the night, wearing jeans (when I finally fit back into them), doing laundry and grocery shopping. While I never doubted my innate desire to be home with my child it was definitely a huge mental and emotional adjustment and took me some time to inwardly reestablish the definition of who I was.
I am incredibly proud to be a Mom, and have the utmost respect for all Moms—"Stay at Home" and "Working Moms" as we can all agree it is the hardest job we've ever done but certainly the most rewarding!
I also wanted to take the time to thank all of you that have reached out to me as a result of the joluka article. It's been wonderful to hear from old friends and great to make new ones. All of your emails/letters have been incredibly kind and supportive. Please feel free to contact me at cheryl@joluka.com.
PS I was class of 1990, not 1986—don't want any of you thinking I'm
older than I am!!
Warm Regards-
Cheryl Duddy Lentine ’90
Westborough
Family Legacy
The recent issue of the UMass Alumni magazine carried an interesting
article about Alumni Families and legacies. Though we may not
claim the largest family or legacy in today’s Alumni Association, we
can claim a Legacy that spans all three phases of development in the
Amherst Flagship Campus.
As active Life members of the Alumni Association, we are proud to trace our Legacy to Massachusetts Agricultural College 1903 and 1908. Family members as shown on the attached compilation have graduated from Mass Aggie, Mass State and UMass.
It was a challenge to compile this Family Legacy. Thanks for providing the impetus to put it all on paper. We’ll be interested to see if other Alums submit family stories to you.
We enjoy receiving the Alumni Magazine so that we can keep in touch with UMass happenings. Thank you for your efforts.
- Theoren L. Warner MAC 1908
Daughter Louise MAC ‘37
Daughter Elizabeth MSC ‘39
Married Rexford Avery MSC ‘39
Son Edward C. MAC ‘43
Married Mary E. Martin MSC ‘44
Granddaughters
Sarah Warner Stone UMass ‘97
Jennifer Warner UMass ‘06 - Frederick C. Warner MAC 1909 (brother of Theoren)
- Raymond W. Warner MAC 1914 (brother of Theoren and Frederick)
Son Charles UMass ‘47
Married Jacqueline Marien UMass ‘48
Son David UMass ‘80
Married Maria Montenegro UMass ‘80
Daughter Kimberly UMass ‘77
Daughter Kathryn UMass ‘82
Daughter Mildred UMass ‘50
Married Robert Byrne UMass ‘51
Son Jeffrey UMass ‘77
Daughter Teresa UMass ‘74
Daughter Linda UMass ‘82 - Henry T. Martin MAC 1903
Son Henry F. Martin MSC ‘43
Daughter Mary E. Martin MSC ‘44
Married Edward C. Warner MSC ‘43 - Clarence F. Clark MAC 1922 (brother-in-law Theoren Warner)
Married Frances Martin MAC ‘23
Mary Martin Warner ‘44
Edward C. Warner ‘43
Hilton Head, South Carolina
In Support of Marxism
In response to Mr. Cadorette in the "No More
Marxists" section of the Winter
2007 publication, I cannot help but to disagree. The first thing that
Mr.
Cadorette has to understand is the his personal definition of Marxism
is very
far from the actual meaning. First of all, Marxism is NOT the same
as the
Socialism exhibited by the USSR. The economic system attempted by the
Soviets
after the Bolchevik Revolution of 1914 was not so much Marxism (although
it was
Karl Marx, who WAS a Russian who is the father of Marxism) as it was
Socialism. Furthermore, what the Soviets paraded around as socialism,
was
really just a form of frustrated capitalism, or in other words, a state
capitalism. Joseph Stalin and his actions against his people in the
USSR were
a result of Stalin's own thirst for power and control, not the "leftist" school
of thought called Marxism, or the much more accurate title of State
Capitalism
for that matter.
"The only places Marxism is relevant is in the rarefied air of
academia and the
dictatorships where human rights don't matter." Mr. Cadorette,
this statement
is as ignorant as your analogies. Marxism is a form of Socialism, which
stresses that the work performed by people is to be equally compensated
back to
the worker. For instance, a worker produces 10 dollars worth of a particular
commodity; that same worker receives 10 dollars for his work. This
is to say
that Marxism preaches the equality between all members of a society
(which
cannot be said for capitalism). How many people in our own capitalist
society
just sit around in a boardroom making millions of dollars, while workers
are
continually getting laid off in efforts to cut costs, and subsequently,
increase profits. This system is unfair to the worker.
Furthermore, your remark of Marxism and dictatorships is an oxymoron.
The very
first idea that Marxism teaches is that there is only one class of
person in a
Marxist society, the worker. It is the worker who produces the commodity,
it
is the worker who determines how much to produce, it is the worker
who dictates
what its value is. There is no dictator or prime minister in a Marxist
society. At worst (as in Stalin's state capitalism), it is a worker
vanguard
who takes the place of the dictator or prime minister. This means one
of two
things: either your definition of Marxism is wrong or that whatever
dictatorship your referring to was wrongly labeled Marxism.. both choices
seem
very plausible.
Furthermore, exposure to different ideas and beliefs is certainly
what makes
college fun and interesting, but more importantly, different ideas
and beliefs
are what broadens our knowledge, and makes college what it is. Your
assumption
that Marxism is harmful is harmful in and of itself. I feel the only
reason
you feel Marxism is harmful is because you know only as much as the
mass media
is willing to tell you.
Again, I want to stress that Marxism is not a murderer, it is not
the failed
ideology of some Soviet madman. It is not a dictatorship with no regard
to
human rights, it is NOT like hiring a gardener to work at a parking
garage.
Marxism is an alternative perspective when trying to understand how
modern
societies work. Not to mention, your darling Capitalism has even adopted
certain Socialist systems to make up for it's own shortcomings. Therefore,
I
think it is more important than ever before that more schools and more
people
study and understand the different schools of thought, whether it be
the age
old debate between capitalism and socialism, or the debate between
evolution
and creationism.
I applaud the UMass Amherst economics department for supporting the
expansion
of knowledge rather than trying to eliminate it. College is about being
open-
minded and experiencing things you've never experienced before. It's
about
learning new ideas that you would have never known about otherwise,
as well as
meeting people from around the world who may and will change your outlook
on
life and the world in general.
Richard Lee ’07
Easton
No Swamp Yankees
Please pass on to Don Cary Freeman (letter in
winter 2007 issue) the following information. In Lexington, Massachusetts,
there are two public buildings paying tribute to the Cary family who
were successful business people and passed on their good fortune to
a town they loved: Cary Memorial Library and Cary Hall where town meetings
are held. No Swamp Yankees here.
Judy Moore Adams ’60G
Groton
Musical Wonders Beats Morris' Music Box
I hate to burst the bubble of the claim by the Morris
Museum that its assemblage of 700 music boxes, curated by Ellen
Snyder-Grenier '80, is "the only one of its kind in the Western
Hemisphere" "In Perfect Harmony," winter 2007 issue).
I've been to the Musical
Wonder House, 18 High St. in Wiscasset, Maine, which claims 5,000
music boxes and which did repair work on a Madonna-and-Child figurine
music box that belonged to my maternal grandmother. Visit for yourself
and see room after room crammed with music boxes of all varieties.
It will reopen in late May; phone 207-882-7163 for hours.
Mark Pattison '98G
Washington, D.C.
Family First
Bravo to Cheryl Lentine “Blue
Jean Baby,” winter 2007, for her creative success and her willingness
to put her family first. I take issue with the writer’s choice of words
to describe Cheryl’s departure from the corporate world. There was
no “identity theft.” She willingly made the change to be home with
her child. To use such words implies that women without a career have
no identity, and that those who find themselves at home have been robbed
of something basic to their existence. Is it really so difficult to
give credit to a mom who chooses her children over a career? Clearly
Cheryl’s identity did not evaporate, or she would not have gone on
to create joluka.
Joanne (Ezbicki) Hamilton ’72
Rockville, Maryland
Marxism Has its Place in History
Regarding “Inbox,” winter 2007 “No More Marxists”:
Although I did not attend UMass, my husband, Alan Sica ’78G, did. We
lived in the area for four years while he completed his Ph.D. studies
in the 1970s. Every cultural era is followed by a reaction to it. Mr.
Cadorette ’90 and Mr. Price ’91 both express their disapproval of Dr.
Githinji in the Economics Department, descrying Marxism as an embarrassment
and a murderous failure.
On the contrary, in the name of academic learning, there is nothing
more important than knowing what the rest of the world knows and thinks.
The undergraduate years are often a brief period of exposure to the
world of human thought. Keep up the good work, UMass. And be proud
of your degree, Mr. Cadorette: your alma mater does not bend with the
winds of fashion. And thank you, Mr. Price, for contributing to the
campus’s attractions; may they continue.
Anne Sica
State College, Pennsylvania
Kudos to Magazine
I subscribe to too many magazines, but I always take time to peruse
the UMass Magazine. In fact, after reading the winter issue
I wanted to let you know that I think your magazine does a fantastic
job of showcasing the University. The writing and photography are
both first rate and the diversity of topics shows the incredible
variety of choices that students enjoy. The magazine makes me want
to go back to college! The alumni publication I receive from the
private college where I earned a master’s degree pales in comparison!
Keep up the great work.
Neil Rhein ’85
Mansfield
Ignorance of Marxism
In regards to the opinions expressed in the last issue about the hiring
of Professor Mwangi
wa Githinji, it is just such dogmatic and factually incorrect
ideas that make teaching Marxism as an economic theory important today. Equating
Marxism with totalitarian political systems and mass murderers
is just plain ignorance of the subject. Marxist economic theory is
simply an alternative model of how the economy works. It is
neither an "economic system", whatever that is, nor
a model for mass murder.
How a theory that attempts to explain the workings of contemporary
economic models can become a "discredited failed economic
system" is baffling. There is no proposed "system" in
the writings of Karl Marx. Day One of any intro course
would have made that clear. Even more baffling is how the same theory
can explain the actions of ruthless totalitarian political regimes bent
on maintaining their power base at any cost. Far more people have been killed
by followers of a Christian belief system than any followers of Karl Marx. Maybe
UMass should avoid hiring Christians or teaching the subjects they
espouse. Or maybe the editorial staff should be more careful
about publishing opinions from the lunatic fringe. They
make my UMass education look bad.
Britton Cooke '01
Rowley
Swamp Irish
Re "Swamp Yankee": have you ever heard
of the "Bog Irish?" Same deal.
Dan Osterman '87
Boston
Stockbridge History Appreciated
I was pleased to read Vince Cleary's article about Levi
Stockbridge in the Winter 2007 issue. The campus has a rich history
linked to people and buildings and I hope to see more of
this kind of article in the future. I suggest that one
might be on Daniel Chester French, sculptor of the Minuteman
and the Lincoln Memorial, who, as the son of UMass' first President,
lived in the Boltwood-Stockbridge House and was dubbed by his father
as "the first graduate of the Massachusetts Agricultural College."
I would offer a correction to Vince's history of the Boltwood-Stockbridge
House (1728). It was not built in Amherst, even though
today it is the oldest house still standing on its original location
in Amherst. It was built in Hadley, which was founded in 1661.
Amherst was not created until 1759, thirty one years after the house was built. I think that Vince may have been misled by some speculation in Paul F. Norton's 1975 booklet Amherst: A Guide to Its Architecture.
Joseph S. Larson '56, ’58G
Pelham
Appreciating Today's Student Life
The winter issue of 2007, UMass Amherst, “student
life 2007” was a joy to read and quite a source of enlightenment
with the brief profile of Levi Stockbridge, rare music machines (marvelous)
the impressive achievements of alumni and alumni authors of significant
books and alumni inventors. “Blue Jean Baby” was a great story
about a creative vision and what it takes as well as health and sports
topics.
In the spring of 1949, I graduated (Languages and Literature) and married Don Blomquist after a 6-month campus romance. He was in the Navy in World War II, so he went through UMass on the G.I. Bill and worked at Norton Co., now St. Gobain, for 33 years in research and development. We were married 49 years and in those days there was no “degree” for parenting, but today, you need all the help you can get especially if sending a son or daughter to college, i.e. the role of the cell phone!
In the 40’s, men’s and women’s fraternities played a key role. I was Pi Beta Phi and Don SAE and they created a stable college experience with all the then current values stressed: respect, consideration, caring, help in various ways, sharing, achieved through open discussion and adult examples.
I think in my days, it was not common for women to attend college
but fortunately, that has totally changed.
Nancy Bowman Blomquist ’49
Shrewsbury
A Memory with a View
I thoroughly enjoyed the article “Quabbin’s
Keeper” in your Fall 2006 issue (page 20). My ancestors were displaced when
the towns were evacuated for the reservoir, and I have always been in awe of
the landscape when stopping at the scenic pull-off on Route 202. It is nice to
know that Bruce Spencer ’64 treated the surrounding area with such respect for
nature. I am curious though—what exactly is a Swamp Yankee accent?
Suzanne Engel Baron ’71
Middletown, Deleware
Editor’s Note: We decided to pose Ms. Baron’s question to retired professor Don Freeman, who founded the linguistics department at UMass Amherst in the early 1970s. He describes himself as a Swamp Yankee.
My knowledge of “Swamp Yankee” lore is sort of anecdotal and episodic
(like the concept itself, perhaps). I was raised (by a mother who
was born in California) to think that our family were Swamp Yankees,
and the definition I was given was that a Swamp Yankee was from an
old, preferably Mayflower-descended, Yankee family that had never
amounted to a hill of beans, which fit our family pretty well. Family
lore has it that the Carys (Cary is my middle name) were tossed out
of Plymouth and then Boston settlements for unspecified shortcomings
and fetched up in Deerfield, which was the western frontier of this
part of the United States for a pretty good while. Indeed, when I
came to teach at UMass Amherst in 1968, the South Deerfield telephone
book (there was such a thing then) had about a half page of Carys
in it. The Carys moved west with the frontier, and the last of them
was my great-grandfather Cary, who took up a tree claim near what
is now Ogallala, Nebraska. The government was trying to figure out
how to both plow the prairie and retain the soil, and gave tree claimants
160 acres of land, which was theirs for nothing after 10 years if
they had managed to grow trees on 10 percent of it. Great-granddad
failed and had to go back to Michigan, but not before my grandmother
was born in a sod hut on the tree claim (later they discovered the
Chinese elm tree, which has a complex root system and requires almost
no water, and it is those trees that line U.S. 30, the old National
Road, straight across Nebraska). So that’s the social idea—either
retreating into the land and living a semihermitic existence (some
Swamp Yankees) or constantly lighting out for the territory (my Swamp
Yankee ancestors, or so my mother would have it).
The accent is a bit harder. It’s basically that of residents of non-urban
eastern Massachusetts, New Hampshire, parts of eastern Vermont, and
Maine—the so-called “r-less” dialect. There are some lexical items
that are a giveaway. One of them is “spider” for “frying pan” (pronounced
SPI-DAH, of course). Another is “tonic” for any sweet soft drink
(not just carbonated quinine water). Another is “spa,” pronounced
SPAR, for what the rest of us call a convenience store with a soda
fountain. A pronunciation that usually marks the Swamp Yankee is
what linguists call a glottal stop, a catch in the voice (the best
example is the sound between the syllables of “uh-uh,” the variety
of that phrase that means “no”). My mom, ever alert to catch me in
Swamp-Yankeeisms, used to make me say the phrase “Kettles and bottles
in Brattleboro” without the glottal stop that a true Swamp Yankee
would insert as the pronunciation of the double “t.” Despite Mom’s
efforts (she’s still at it, at 93), I never did manage to conceal
my Swamp Yankee origins from the truly discerning. My own speech
has a very dark r where Swamp Yankees (and, to be fair, people from
eastern Massachusetts) have the so-called r-less r. It turns out
that this dark r is a well-attested substitute for r-less r in people
who on the basis of birth and early residence might be expected to
display that eastern Massachusetts characteristic but have (as Mom
would have it) overcome our origins.
There’s another version of the Swamp Yankee narrative to the effect
that it originates in Rhode Island, where the—shall we say “disadvantaged”
didn’t live on the seven hills of Providence, but out in the western
part of the state, which indeed used to be swampland in the 17th
and 18th centuries.
As you can tell, the narrative that was passed down to me is rather
heavily laden with family lore, but that’s the New England way, isn’t
it?
Don Freeman
Heath
No More Marxists
UMass hires Marxist Mwangi wa Githinji as
a professor of economics (“Economist for the Proletariat,” page 8, Fall 2006).
Didn’t anybody in the Department of Economics get the memo that Marxism as an
economic principle has been discredited everywhere it has been used? The only
places Marxism is relevant is in the rarefied air of academia and dictatorships
where human rights don’t matter.
Hiring a Marxist to be an economics professor is like hiring a gardener
to work at a parking garage. What he knows won’t be of much use to
anybody and it certainly wouldn’t appear to be money well spent.
wa Githinji’s students will have to waste time in his class, learning
concepts and ideas that have no relevance in the real world. Taxpayers
foot the bill for an employee who teaches something akin to Trivial
Pursuit™ and their hard-earned tax dollars are wasted yet again.
UMass continues to cast its reputation as the far-left bastion in
western Massachusetts that causes my friends who graduated from other
colleges to snicker at how loony the place can really be.
I understand that exposure to different ideas and beliefs is part of
what makes college fun and interesting. But Marxism has proved itself
to be harmful, some would argue disastrous, to those it has been
imposed upon. Students, taxpayers, and UMass Amherst would all be
better served if Marxist textbooks were collecting dust in some storeroom
and Marxist professors were getting hired somewhere else.
Neal Cadorette ’90
Somerset
It’s not surprising that the
economics department has hired yet another Marxist. The leftist tilt
in that department, and throughout much of academia, is well known.
But still, one would have thought that the dramatic failure of Marxism
as an economic system, as well as the accumulating evidence that Marxists
murdered more than 100 million people while spreading their tyranny
during the 20th century, would be cause for some circumspection before
continuing to push that failed ideology on another generation of students.
Your article at least reminds me why I do not and will not designate
any part of my yearly donations to the University to support its academic
programs. Instead I designate my gifts for things like campus beautification,
which the university needs much more than another Marxist professor.
R. Edward Price ’91
Rochester, New York


