Wednesday, September 12, 2012
- NYC 09/11/2012 by Linda Zises (WBAI)
Revelatory, Provocative, Powerful, Enlightening:
Canadian director Lea Pool, best known for Set Me Free, uses interviews, animated sequences, vintage clips from news programs and public-service announcements, and coverage of pink-ribbon events, walks "for the cure" in D.C. and San Francisco, a pink-lighted Niagara Falls and Empire State Building, as well as a jump by "Aerial Pink Force" skydivers to get her message across.
Based on the Samantha King book, Pink Ribbons, Inc.: Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthropy, the film features King as one of the movie's main voices along with Nickled and Dimed author Barbara Ehrenreich, a breast cancer survivor; former surgeon Dr. Susan Love, a skeptic of "slash, burn and poison" treatments; and former Breast Cancer Action leader Barbara Brenner along with many "survivors"/victims of the disease.
Sometimes an expose is so obvious you wonder why it wasn’t common knowledge. That’s how I felt as I watched Pink Ribbons, Inc, the carefully constructed, professionally produced examination of the Pink Ribbon campaign that has gone viral.
You want to feel good, you want to party and support a cause that everyone embraces, join the Pink Ribbon parades, and support more money for breast cancer, a cause every woman embraces because we know that breast cancer is a women’s problem, a disease that strikes women with an ever increasing incidence.
We know we are safe at Pink Ribbon events where we will not be hounded by police because the police have women in their ranks, and have mothers, wives and daughters. We rush to avail ourselves of the Revlon and Avon products, the Fuzz drinks, and generous “giveaways” sponsored by Este Lauder and the other corporations that seem determined to show themselves in a good, humanitarian light. Even my yoga school embraces the Pink Ribbon: it donates money, collected from loaned yoga mats and proudly announces how much money it donated each year.
Each year, for as long as I have been alive, money has been sought and donated to “The Cause”, which totaled billions of dollars. Are you impressed?
Pink Ribbons Inc. shows how women are the victims of the disease and of the proclaimed efforts for cure. In all these many years, the treatment for breast cancer has not changed, and the prognosis for recovery has not changed. Meanwhile, the chaotic fundamentals of research have grown more dispersed and potentially less effective, and the result is that there have been no new ideas for what causes breast cancer, and no cure. It seems as if cancer is “Something inside so strong”, as the song by Labi Siffre says.
Pink Ribbons Inc. shows all this and more. The corporation of the cancer movement is riveting to watch, the emotional impact is painful to see and that’s what makes this film a must see for all.
We need to put the cancer industry back into the business of fighting the disease, not making money for those who profess to care.
Opens in theaters 9/25/2012
Canadian director Lea Pool, best known for Set Me Free, uses interviews, animated sequences, vintage clips from news programs and public-service announcements, and coverage of pink-ribbon events, walks "for the cure" in D.C. and San Francisco, a pink-lighted Niagara Falls and Empire State Building, as well as a jump by "Aerial Pink Force" skydivers to get her message across.
Based on the Samantha King book, Pink Ribbons, Inc.: Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthropy, the film features King as one of the movie's main voices along with Nickled and Dimed author Barbara Ehrenreich, a breast cancer survivor; former surgeon Dr. Susan Love, a skeptic of "slash, burn and poison" treatments; and former Breast Cancer Action leader Barbara Brenner along with many "survivors"/victims of the disease.
Sometimes an expose is so obvious you wonder why it wasn’t common knowledge. That’s how I felt as I watched Pink Ribbons, Inc, the carefully constructed, professionally produced examination of the Pink Ribbon campaign that has gone viral.
You want to feel good, you want to party and support a cause that everyone embraces, join the Pink Ribbon parades, and support more money for breast cancer, a cause every woman embraces because we know that breast cancer is a women’s problem, a disease that strikes women with an ever increasing incidence.
We know we are safe at Pink Ribbon events where we will not be hounded by police because the police have women in their ranks, and have mothers, wives and daughters. We rush to avail ourselves of the Revlon and Avon products, the Fuzz drinks, and generous “giveaways” sponsored by Este Lauder and the other corporations that seem determined to show themselves in a good, humanitarian light. Even my yoga school embraces the Pink Ribbon: it donates money, collected from loaned yoga mats and proudly announces how much money it donated each year.
Each year, for as long as I have been alive, money has been sought and donated to “The Cause”, which totaled billions of dollars. Are you impressed?
Pink Ribbons Inc. shows how women are the victims of the disease and of the proclaimed efforts for cure. In all these many years, the treatment for breast cancer has not changed, and the prognosis for recovery has not changed. Meanwhile, the chaotic fundamentals of research have grown more dispersed and potentially less effective, and the result is that there have been no new ideas for what causes breast cancer, and no cure. It seems as if cancer is “Something inside so strong”, as the song by Labi Siffre says.
Pink Ribbons Inc. shows all this and more. The corporation of the cancer movement is riveting to watch, the emotional impact is painful to see and that’s what makes this film a must see for all.
We need to put the cancer industry back into the business of fighting the disease, not making money for those who profess to care.
Opens in theaters 9/25/2012
Watch video
Saturday, June 16, 2012
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Harvey Goldberg Remembered
Harvey Goldberg Remembered
In the last several years I
learned from Mitchel Cohen that my personal knowledge of Harvey Goldberg would
be of value to those who honor him today. When I told Mitchel that I had gone
to the U. of Wisconsin I did not know anyone honored Harvey or of his importance to the academic
world.
In response, I promised to
write about my past knowledge and friendship and Mitchel kept telling me, ‘time
is running out’.
So before that happens, I am
putting into the written word, my rich memories of Harvey so others can know
him as I once did. I don’t think
Harvey would object.
It was in late Nov 1963, the
same year, day President Kennedy was shot that I met Harvey..
I was an undergraduate
student at the University of Wisconsin Madison. I had finished my Swimming Class at the bottom of The Hill
and was making my way up to the Academic classroom, a trek which I accomplished
with great effort as the Hill was steep, time was limited and my mind was on my
efforts to be on time, when someone yelled at me from a slight distance
away, “No class today”
A phrase they repeated until
I stopped my arduous trek.
The words formed an
incredulous thought. “No
school. Classes cancelled”
At the U of Wisconsin there
was probably only one other time when classes had been cancelled for inclement
weather that defied traversing but today the weather was tolerable, average for
the Wisconsin hearty.
“Why “ I asked as if the knowledge of the what would calm my
disbelief.
“The President’s been shot”,
my informer said. “Which
President?” I asked.
“Kennedy”, he yelled
back. Annoyed at my ignorance he
rushed on leaving me standing on the Hill trying to understand and decide what
to do at this critical moment.
I went home
As I made my way down the
Hill I realized that I was alone,
No one on the Hill. A
deafening silence overwhelmed this campus where 26 thousand students went to
class, climbed the Hill on many a day.
Now there was no one, just
me rushing, running away hoping to find something of the usual. Even the Bar at the bottom of the Hill
where on any morning at seven thirty or earlier men stood by the Bar window,
beer in hand looking out at us
pathetic students walking briskly to class. Even they were not there. It was surrealistic, this moment between when Kennedy was
shot and his death was yet to be announced.
Arthur was at home when I got there. He was
sitting on the sofa listening to the radio.
Arthur Gundershein and I
shared a small studio apartment with a common bathroom off the second floor
hall way. Arthur was soft spoken
seemingly shy man who I was instantly attracted to because of his beautiful
very straight, dark blond hair that moved as he moved, even, it seemed, when he
talked. He was domestically inclined without compromising his masculinity. That meant he did the shopping for food
with me and then he cooked, he did the dishes, he walked the dog and I played
with the Cat.
And he did it all, he said,
and I agreed, because it was his
apartment. I shared the expenses
and he paid the bills.
Arthur was both restless and
transfixed. The radio was on
and we heard over and over again, it was The Cubans who did it. The Radical Left.” those damn Commies”
was the phrase implied. They cause
nothing but trouble.
I sat next to Arthur, frozen with trauma. Suddenly Arthur got up. I can’t stay here” he said. “I can’t listen to this anymore. I’m going to the Union”.
The Student Union, situated
on Lade Mendoza was home to most students at one time or another. It was where students hung out night and day rather than going to
class, or because they went to class and needed a beer to recover. Or just because it was there and it was
filled with like-minded people, student all approximately the same age.
“I’ll be back soon”, he promised
and he was.
He rushed into the apartment
and announced he had met a Professor who was new to Wisconsin, just back from
India. He was very upset and Arthur invited him to come over to
our place.
“Here!” I asked, again placed
into instant shock at the unusual, the unexpected. “Yes”, He
answered as he started to straighten up our usual mess.
“No one has ever visited us
before. Arthur. He probably
won’t come”
“Oh, he will come Arthur
“,insisted.
“Within the next half
hour. You’ll see. He’ll be here”.
And he was
“His name is Harvey
Goldberg.
“ NO. Not my history Professor?”
“Yelp”
But I forged his
signature”, I protested. “Remember? I had to . His
class was all filled up and what if he finds out?”.
“He won’t”, Arthur said
“He is upset about
Kennedy. That’s what he cares
about. He thinks this is all very
very important”.
It was less than an half
hour.
Arthur answered the
door. Harvey came up the stairs
without undo noise or commotion,
following in Arthur’s wake he entered the apartment quietly.
Even close up Harvey was very
thin and very busy. There was an
oral of activity about him even though the first day in the apartment he made
an effort to sit quietly, asking questions, talking about the book, a biography
that he had recently completed an a minor person in the French revolution.
Arthur lingered in the
kitchen area getting something for Harvey to eat or drink.
I sat near Harvey on sofa
while the cat played with my hair from above. (Harvey did not like cats or dogs) and we had one of each)
Harvey asked me if I would cook dinner when he accepted Arthur’s
invitation. When I said, no. I don’t cook Harvey was very surprised.
The image of the American
housewife dispelled as the radio announced that it wasn’t a left wing radical
but someone from the other side of the divide. A crazy man. A
lone shooter. By the
time Harvey left the apartment Kennedy was pronounced dead and the assassin was
Lee Harvey Oswald, and the grassy knoll was about to become a most talked about
piece of American real estate, a permanent part of our collective memories.
That’s what I remember. It was a long time ago and my facts
might be wrong but the essence of our initial meeting is captured. That moment when for years later people
would ask, what were doing when Kennedy was shot.
Harvey became a regular
visitor to our humble abode. He
came over after classes, traversing the stairs in a noisy seemingly single
bouncy fashion due to his always being in a rush, a hurry to go nowhere but that was his way.
He took us to his apartment
to show us his books. I can
remember every apartment/home I have ever been to. That is the kind of specific memory I have. But Harvey’s apartment
defied my usual acumen. I remember
nothing but the books.
It was the first time I saw
floor to ceiling bookcases that covered the entire length of his one room
apartment and both sides leaving room in the middle for his necessities for living and of course the doorway was
book free.
I remember him, standing in
front of the huge expansive bookcases telling us about what books he put where
and pulling out a book talking about it briefly then returning it to “it’s
rightful place”. I remember nothing of what he said and even if I did I doubt
that I understood it.
Nothing about Harvey was
usual or expected which made him difficult to understand and equally difficult
to forget. But we tried.
He told us he had just
returned from India and he described his New Year’s Eve at the Taj Mahal
with great love of detail. Men, men he said, endless supply of men
Clearly Harvey was not
comfortable in the company of Women but that didn’t stop him from coming over
for his daily visit.
He never ate with us. He stood over the table while we ate
making his displeasure of our ways painfully obvious. Our feeding the dog on the floor and the cat on our kitchen
table was unacceptable. he
declared the arrangement “worse
than India” something that at that time I didn’t fully appreciate. (I visited India many years later).
In the fullness of time we
learned that Harvey had in fact not traveled alone. He traveled with a young man, a sophomore who returned from
India with Harvey and now attended the U of W.
Both he and Harvey had
applied to Wisconsin at the same time,
Harvey to teach since he had been banned from Harvard because of his
radical left leanings and the student because he followed Harvey to the end of
the World and enjoyed a rich sexual life with him as well.
I don’t remember the man’s
name but at some point they broke off their relationship and the young man
found himself, with our help, in his first heterosexual relationship and Harvey
was lost in the moment of change.
Before he left Harvey made a
dramatic impact in my life which I
never spoke about and could never forget.
I was in his history class
and earned the third highest mark out of several hundred students on my six
week exam. I did equally well on
my twelve week exam.
There was something about the
way Harvey spoke, his dramatic style of jumping onto the stage, wiping his
glasses off his face is a flamboyant gesture and taking the chalk in hand
commencing to write furiously on the provided blackboard that set my mind in
motion. The dates, names, places,
stories filled me with awe and my notes written in my own personal hieroglyphics
were sufficient to bring back the sound of his voice, the content of the
lectures.
One day it was spring. Just like that. Spring came suddenly after the long
hard winter and I didn’t go to class.
Like everyone else, I went to the
Union, the fresh smell of grass , the lake invited us all. My towel in hand my mind on nothing but
the warmth of the sun and the inner sense of life that warm weather brings to
the sufferers of extreme cold.
Harvey came over that
evening. His classes finished he
came rushing into the apartment more excited than usual. “I remember”, he said ” I remember when
I was a student here and the first day of spring when I too was at the Union. I didn’t go to class. But now, I am a professor and I had to
go to class. HAHAHA” he laughed joyfully. “And I gave two thousand years of
Egyptian history today” he said.
“HAHAHA”. He went on
happier than I had ever seen him.
Two thousand years and only three students were sitting in the
auditorium taking notes.
“HA HA” he laughed and left
us in the same hurried manner that brought him into our midst. Even though I was gripped
by fear at an impeding academic doom I too laughed as I pictured him writing
more frenzied than ever as his love of knowledge and his instant understanding
of the down side of being a professor converged.
He never tested us on Egypt. The final was on Iran, Iraq Syria and another country that I don’t remember
now.
I had a solid A going into
the final.
I remember taking my class
notes with me to study for the final down by the lake. I was with my friend Ben.
We were playing around and the wind came and my notes went into the
lake. We retrieved them but they
were compromised and I used some one else’s notes to study for the exam.
I didn’t think too much about
this because with an A going into
he final I was guaranteed a C in the course and that was okay with me. A C or an occasional B. I wasn’t known as a student. I cut classes regularly and rarely
studied. I went to college to
develop my mind, not to gain knowledge per se. And grades were an unwelcome part of the process.
Again we were at diner when
Harvey rushed upstairs, he had my
test paper in his hand. He
didn’t’ throw it at me. He held it above us as he yelled down
onto the tops of our heads, the papers rattling.
“I didn’t believe it”, he
said. “ I had to get
hold of your test to see for myself. How did you do this, how did you get a D on my test. You knew it all. You were my best student” he yelled. How did this happen!”
And then he said words that
stayed with me for the rest of my life. He said.
“You are sick:,
locking his eyes into mine. “You are a very sick lady!” then he turned away and rushed
out of the apartment angry, disappointed.
Finished. He was finished
with us, with me.
He was right.
At the moment of Harvey’s
retreat punctuated by his flamboyant nature, his energy his unabashed
expression of what he cared most about
I was brought into an
awareness that changed my life forever. The next semester I took a course in
Personality 101 and for extra credit I wrote a paper what has been used by many. I wrote a seemingly simple essay
on why I need to fail and ended by affirming that success is still possible.
I remember standing in my
kitchen at home. My mother was
doing laundry downstairs. I held the report card in my hand, the A in
Personality 101 bold on the page.
And I was afraid afraid to show it to her.
I remember standing in that
ambivalent state when the world seems to be on an edge and I remember
simultaneously thinking about Harvey, how he ran down the stairs all a
flutter, and I went downstairs and
gave my mother my report card and quickly as quickly as I could I ran back up
and out of the house, feeling on
my own, ready to tackle the world.
Thank you Harvey for giving
me an adult life filled with ideas
and a kind of fanatic energy that often defies reason.
With the fondest of
memories………
Linda Glasser Zises
Harvey Goldberg Remembered
In the last several years I
learned from Mitchel Cohen that my personal knowledge of Harvey Goldberg would
be of value to those who honor him today. When I told Mitchel that I had gone
to the U. of Wisconsin I did not know anyone honored Harvey or of his importance to the academic
world.
In response, I promised to
write about my past knowledge and friendship and Mitchel kept telling me, ‘time
is running out’.
So before that happens, I am
putting into the written word, my rich memories of Harvey so others can know
him as I once did. I don’t think
Harvey would object.
It was in late Nov 1963, the
same year, day President Kennedy was shot that I met Harvey..
I was an undergraduate
student at the University of Wisconsin Madison. I had finished my Swimming Class at the bottom of The Hill
and was making my way up to the Academic classroom, a trek which I accomplished
with great effort as the Hill was steep, time was limited and my mind was on my
efforts to be on time, when someone yelled at me from a slight distance
away, “No class today”
A phrase they repeated until
I stopped my arduous trek.
The words formed an
incredulous thought. “No
school. Classes cancelled”
At the U of Wisconsin there
was probably only one other time when classes had been cancelled for inclement
weather that defied traversing but today the weather was tolerable, average for
the Wisconsin hearty.
“Why “ I asked as if the knowledge of the what would calm my
disbelief.
“The President’s been shot”,
my informer said. “Which
President?” I asked.
“Kennedy”, he yelled
back. Annoyed at my ignorance he
rushed on leaving me standing on the Hill trying to understand and decide what
to do at this critical moment.
I went home
As I made my way down the
Hill I realized that I was alone,
No one on the Hill. A
deafening silence overwhelmed this campus where 26 thousand students went to
class, climbed the Hill on many a day.
Now there was no one, just
me rushing, running away hoping to find something of the usual. Even the Bar at the bottom of the Hill
where on any morning at seven thirty or earlier men stood by the Bar window,
beer in hand looking out at us
pathetic students walking briskly to class. Even they were not there. It was surrealistic, this moment between when Kennedy was
shot and his death was yet to be announced.
Arthur was at home when I got there. He was
sitting on the sofa listening to the radio.
Arthur Gundershein and I
shared a small studio apartment with a common bathroom off the second floor
hall way. Arthur was soft spoken
seemingly shy man who I was instantly attracted to because of his beautiful
very straight, dark blond hair that moved as he moved, even, it seemed, when he
talked. He was domestically inclined without compromising his masculinity. That meant he did the shopping for food
with me and then he cooked, he did the dishes, he walked the dog and I played
with the Cat.
And he did it all, he said,
and I agreed, because it was his
apartment. I shared the expenses
and he paid the bills.
Arthur was both restless and
transfixed. The radio was on
and we heard over and over again, it was The Cubans who did it. The Radical Left.” those damn Commies”
was the phrase implied. They cause
nothing but trouble.
I sat next to Arthur, frozen with trauma. Suddenly Arthur got up. I can’t stay here” he said. “I can’t listen to this anymore. I’m going to the Union”.
The Student Union, situated
on Lade Mendoza was home to most students at one time or another. It was where students hung out night and day rather than going to
class, or because they went to class and needed a beer to recover. Or just because it was there and it was
filled with like-minded people, student all approximately the same age.
“I’ll be back soon”, he promised
and he was.
He rushed into the apartment
and announced he had met a Professor who was new to Wisconsin, just back from
India. He was very upset and Arthur invited him to come over to
our place.
“Here!” I asked, again placed
into instant shock at the unusual, the unexpected. “Yes”, He
answered as he started to straighten up our usual mess.
“No one has ever visited us
before. Arthur. He probably
won’t come”
“Oh, he will come Arthur
“,insisted.
“Within the next half
hour. You’ll see. He’ll be here”.
And he was
“His name is Harvey
Goldberg.
“ NO. Not my history Professor?”
“Yelp”
But I forged his
signature”, I protested. “Remember? I had to . His
class was all filled up and what if he finds out?”.
“He won’t”, Arthur said
“He is upset about
Kennedy. That’s what he cares
about. He thinks this is all very
very important”.
It was less than an half
hour.
Arthur answered the
door. Harvey came up the stairs
without undo noise or commotion,
following in Arthur’s wake he entered the apartment quietly.
Even close up Harvey was very
thin and very busy. There was an
oral of activity about him even though the first day in the apartment he made
an effort to sit quietly, asking questions, talking about the book, a biography
that he had recently completed an a minor person in the French revolution.
Arthur lingered in the
kitchen area getting something for Harvey to eat or drink.
I sat near Harvey on sofa
while the cat played with my hair from above. (Harvey did not like cats or dogs) and we had one of each)
Harvey asked me if I would cook dinner when he accepted Arthur’s
invitation. When I said, no. I don’t cook Harvey was very surprised.
The image of the American
housewife dispelled as the radio announced that it wasn’t a left wing radical
but someone from the other side of the divide. A crazy man. A
lone shooter. By the
time Harvey left the apartment Kennedy was pronounced dead and the assassin was
Lee Harvey Oswald, and the grassy knoll was about to become a most talked about
piece of American real estate, a permanent part of our collective memories.
That’s what I remember. It was a long time ago and my facts
might be wrong but the essence of our initial meeting is captured. That moment when for years later people
would ask, what were doing when Kennedy was shot.
Harvey became a regular
visitor to our humble abode. He
came over after classes, traversing the stairs in a noisy seemingly single
bouncy fashion due to his always being in a rush, a hurry to go nowhere but that was his way.
He took us to his apartment
to show us his books. I can
remember every apartment/home I have ever been to. That is the kind of specific memory I have. But Harvey’s apartment
defied my usual acumen. I remember
nothing but the books.
It was the first time I saw
floor to ceiling bookcases that covered the entire length of his one room
apartment and both sides leaving room in the middle for his necessities for living and of course the doorway was
book free.
I remember him, standing in
front of the huge expansive bookcases telling us about what books he put where
and pulling out a book talking about it briefly then returning it to “it’s
rightful place”. I remember nothing of what he said and even if I did I doubt
that I understood it.
Nothing about Harvey was
usual or expected which made him difficult to understand and equally difficult
to forget. But we tried.
He told us he had just
returned from India and he described his New Year’s Eve at the Taj Mahal
with great love of detail. Men, men he said, endless supply of men
Clearly Harvey was not
comfortable in the company of Women but that didn’t stop him from coming over
for his daily visit.
He never ate with us. He stood over the table while we ate
making his displeasure of our ways painfully obvious. Our feeding the dog on the floor and the cat on our kitchen
table was unacceptable. he
declared the arrangement “worse
than India” something that at that time I didn’t fully appreciate. (I visited India many years later).
In the fullness of time we
learned that Harvey had in fact not traveled alone. He traveled with a young man, a sophomore who returned from
India with Harvey and now attended the U of W.
Both he and Harvey had
applied to Wisconsin at the same time,
Harvey to teach since he had been banned from Harvard because of his
radical left leanings and the student because he followed Harvey to the end of
the World and enjoyed a rich sexual life with him as well.
I don’t remember the man’s
name but at some point they broke off their relationship and the young man
found himself, with our help, in his first heterosexual relationship and Harvey
was lost in the moment of change.
Before he left Harvey made a
dramatic impact in my life which I
never spoke about and could never forget.
I was in his history class
and earned the third highest mark out of several hundred students on my six
week exam. I did equally well on
my twelve week exam.
There was something about the
way Harvey spoke, his dramatic style of jumping onto the stage, wiping his
glasses off his face is a flamboyant gesture and taking the chalk in hand
commencing to write furiously on the provided blackboard that set my mind in
motion. The dates, names, places,
stories filled me with awe and my notes written in my own personal hieroglyphics
were sufficient to bring back the sound of his voice, the content of the
lectures.
One day it was spring. Just like that. Spring came suddenly after the long
hard winter and I didn’t go to class.
Like everyone else, I went to the
Union, the fresh smell of grass , the lake invited us all. My towel in hand my mind on nothing but
the warmth of the sun and the inner sense of life that warm weather brings to
the sufferers of extreme cold.
Harvey came over that
evening. His classes finished he
came rushing into the apartment more excited than usual. “I remember”, he said ” I remember when
I was a student here and the first day of spring when I too was at the Union. I didn’t go to class. But now, I am a professor and I had to
go to class. HAHAHA” he laughed joyfully. “And I gave two thousand years of
Egyptian history today” he said.
“HAHAHA”. He went on
happier than I had ever seen him.
Two thousand years and only three students were sitting in the
auditorium taking notes.
“HA HA” he laughed and left
us in the same hurried manner that brought him into our midst. Even though I was gripped
by fear at an impeding academic doom I too laughed as I pictured him writing
more frenzied than ever as his love of knowledge and his instant understanding
of the down side of being a professor converged.
He never tested us on Egypt. The final was on Iran, Iraq Syria and another country that I don’t remember
now.
I had a solid A going into
the final.
I remember taking my class
notes with me to study for the final down by the lake. I was with my friend Ben.
We were playing around and the wind came and my notes went into the
lake. We retrieved them but they
were compromised and I used some one else’s notes to study for the exam.
I didn’t think too much about
this because with an A going into
he final I was guaranteed a C in the course and that was okay with me. A C or an occasional B. I wasn’t known as a student. I cut classes regularly and rarely
studied. I went to college to
develop my mind, not to gain knowledge per se. And grades were an unwelcome part of the process.
Again we were at diner when
Harvey rushed upstairs, he had my
test paper in his hand. He
didn’t’ throw it at me. He held it above us as he yelled down
onto the tops of our heads, the papers rattling.
“I didn’t believe it”, he
said. “ I had to get
hold of your test to see for myself. How did you do this, how did you get a D on my test. You knew it all. You were my best student” he yelled. How did this happen!”
And then he said words that
stayed with me for the rest of my life. He said.
“You are sick:,
locking his eyes into mine. “You are a very sick lady!” then he turned away and rushed
out of the apartment angry, disappointed.
Finished. He was finished
with us, with me.
He was right.
At the moment of Harvey’s
retreat punctuated by his flamboyant nature, his energy his unabashed
expression of what he cared most about
I was brought into an
awareness that changed my life forever. The next semester I took a course in
Personality 101 and for extra credit I wrote a paper what has been used by many. I wrote a seemingly simple essay
on why I need to fail and ended by affirming that success is still possible.
I remember standing in my
kitchen at home. My mother was
doing laundry downstairs. I held the report card in my hand, the A in
Personality 101 bold on the page.
And I was afraid afraid to show it to her.
I remember standing in that
ambivalent state when the world seems to be on an edge and I remember
simultaneously thinking about Harvey, how he ran down the stairs all a
flutter, and I went downstairs and
gave my mother my report card and quickly as quickly as I could I ran back up
and out of the house, feeling on
my own, ready to tackle the world.
Thank you Harvey for giving
me an adult life filled with ideas
and a kind of fanatic energy that often defies reason.
With the fondest of
memories………
Linda Glasser Zises
Harvey Goldberg Remembered
In the last several years I
learned from Mitchel Cohen that my personal knowledge of Harvey Goldberg would
be of value to those who honor him today. When I told Mitchel that I had gone
to the U. of Wisconsin I did not know anyone honored Harvey or of his importance to the academic
world.
In response, I promised to
write about my past knowledge and friendship and Mitchel kept telling me, ‘time
is running out’.
So before that happens, I am
putting into the written word, my rich memories of Harvey so others can know
him as I once did. I don’t think
Harvey would object.
It was in late Nov 1963, the
same year, day President Kennedy was shot that I met Harvey..
I was an undergraduate
student at the University of Wisconsin Madison. I had finished my Swimming Class at the bottom of The Hill
and was making my way up to the Academic classroom, a trek which I accomplished
with great effort as the Hill was steep, time was limited and my mind was on my
efforts to be on time, when someone yelled at me from a slight distance
away, “No class today”
A phrase they repeated until
I stopped my arduous trek.
The words formed an
incredulous thought. “No
school. Classes cancelled”
At the U of Wisconsin there
was probably only one other time when classes had been cancelled for inclement
weather that defied traversing but today the weather was tolerable, average for
the Wisconsin hearty.
“Why “ I asked as if the knowledge of the what would calm my
disbelief.
“The President’s been shot”,
my informer said. “Which
President?” I asked.
“Kennedy”, he yelled
back. Annoyed at my ignorance he
rushed on leaving me standing on the Hill trying to understand and decide what
to do at this critical moment.
I went home
As I made my way down the
Hill I realized that I was alone,
No one on the Hill. A
deafening silence overwhelmed this campus where 26 thousand students went to
class, climbed the Hill on many a day.
Now there was no one, just
me rushing, running away hoping to find something of the usual. Even the Bar at the bottom of the Hill
where on any morning at seven thirty or earlier men stood by the Bar window,
beer in hand looking out at us
pathetic students walking briskly to class. Even they were not there. It was surrealistic, this moment between when Kennedy was
shot and his death was yet to be announced.
Arthur was at home when I got there. He was
sitting on the sofa listening to the radio.
Arthur Gundershein and I
shared a small studio apartment with a common bathroom off the second floor
hall way. Arthur was soft spoken
seemingly shy man who I was instantly attracted to because of his beautiful
very straight, dark blond hair that moved as he moved, even, it seemed, when he
talked. He was domestically inclined without compromising his masculinity. That meant he did the shopping for food
with me and then he cooked, he did the dishes, he walked the dog and I played
with the Cat.
And he did it all, he said,
and I agreed, because it was his
apartment. I shared the expenses
and he paid the bills.
Arthur was both restless and
transfixed. The radio was on
and we heard over and over again, it was The Cubans who did it. The Radical Left.” those damn Commies”
was the phrase implied. They cause
nothing but trouble.
I sat next to Arthur, frozen with trauma. Suddenly Arthur got up. I can’t stay here” he said. “I can’t listen to this anymore. I’m going to the Union”.
The Student Union, situated
on Lade Mendoza was home to most students at one time or another. It was where students hung out night and day rather than going to
class, or because they went to class and needed a beer to recover. Or just because it was there and it was
filled with like-minded people, student all approximately the same age.
“I’ll be back soon”, he promised
and he was.
He rushed into the apartment
and announced he had met a Professor who was new to Wisconsin, just back from
India. He was very upset and Arthur invited him to come over to
our place.
“Here!” I asked, again placed
into instant shock at the unusual, the unexpected. “Yes”, He
answered as he started to straighten up our usual mess.
“No one has ever visited us
before. Arthur. He probably
won’t come”
“Oh, he will come Arthur
“,insisted.
“Within the next half
hour. You’ll see. He’ll be here”.
And he was
“His name is Harvey
Goldberg.
“ NO. Not my history Professor?”
“Yelp”
But I forged his
signature”, I protested. “Remember? I had to . His
class was all filled up and what if he finds out?”.
“He won’t”, Arthur said
“He is upset about
Kennedy. That’s what he cares
about. He thinks this is all very
very important”.
It was less than an half
hour.
Arthur answered the
door. Harvey came up the stairs
without undo noise or commotion,
following in Arthur’s wake he entered the apartment quietly.
Even close up Harvey was very
thin and very busy. There was an
oral of activity about him even though the first day in the apartment he made
an effort to sit quietly, asking questions, talking about the book, a biography
that he had recently completed an a minor person in the French revolution.
Arthur lingered in the
kitchen area getting something for Harvey to eat or drink.
I sat near Harvey on sofa
while the cat played with my hair from above. (Harvey did not like cats or dogs) and we had one of each)
Harvey asked me if I would cook dinner when he accepted Arthur’s
invitation. When I said, no. I don’t cook Harvey was very surprised.
The image of the American
housewife dispelled as the radio announced that it wasn’t a left wing radical
but someone from the other side of the divide. A crazy man. A
lone shooter. By the
time Harvey left the apartment Kennedy was pronounced dead and the assassin was
Lee Harvey Oswald, and the grassy knoll was about to become a most talked about
piece of American real estate, a permanent part of our collective memories.
That’s what I remember. It was a long time ago and my facts
might be wrong but the essence of our initial meeting is captured. That moment when for years later people
would ask, what were doing when Kennedy was shot.
Harvey became a regular
visitor to our humble abode. He
came over after classes, traversing the stairs in a noisy seemingly single
bouncy fashion due to his always being in a rush, a hurry to go nowhere but that was his way.
He took us to his apartment
to show us his books. I can
remember every apartment/home I have ever been to. That is the kind of specific memory I have. But Harvey’s apartment
defied my usual acumen. I remember
nothing but the books.
It was the first time I saw
floor to ceiling bookcases that covered the entire length of his one room
apartment and both sides leaving room in the middle for his necessities for living and of course the doorway was
book free.
I remember him, standing in
front of the huge expansive bookcases telling us about what books he put where
and pulling out a book talking about it briefly then returning it to “it’s
rightful place”. I remember nothing of what he said and even if I did I doubt
that I understood it.
Nothing about Harvey was
usual or expected which made him difficult to understand and equally difficult
to forget. But we tried.
He told us he had just
returned from India and he described his New Year’s Eve at the Taj Mahal
with great love of detail. Men, men he said, endless supply of men
Clearly Harvey was not
comfortable in the company of Women but that didn’t stop him from coming over
for his daily visit.
He never ate with us. He stood over the table while we ate
making his displeasure of our ways painfully obvious. Our feeding the dog on the floor and the cat on our kitchen
table was unacceptable. he
declared the arrangement “worse
than India” something that at that time I didn’t fully appreciate. (I visited India many years later).
In the fullness of time we
learned that Harvey had in fact not traveled alone. He traveled with a young man, a sophomore who returned from
India with Harvey and now attended the U of W.
Both he and Harvey had
applied to Wisconsin at the same time,
Harvey to teach since he had been banned from Harvard because of his
radical left leanings and the student because he followed Harvey to the end of
the World and enjoyed a rich sexual life with him as well.
I don’t remember the man’s
name but at some point they broke off their relationship and the young man
found himself, with our help, in his first heterosexual relationship and Harvey
was lost in the moment of change.
Before he left Harvey made a
dramatic impact in my life which I
never spoke about and could never forget.
I was in his history class
and earned the third highest mark out of several hundred students on my six
week exam. I did equally well on
my twelve week exam.
There was something about the
way Harvey spoke, his dramatic style of jumping onto the stage, wiping his
glasses off his face is a flamboyant gesture and taking the chalk in hand
commencing to write furiously on the provided blackboard that set my mind in
motion. The dates, names, places,
stories filled me with awe and my notes written in my own personal hieroglyphics
were sufficient to bring back the sound of his voice, the content of the
lectures.
One day it was spring. Just like that. Spring came suddenly after the long
hard winter and I didn’t go to class.
Like everyone else, I went to the
Union, the fresh smell of grass , the lake invited us all. My towel in hand my mind on nothing but
the warmth of the sun and the inner sense of life that warm weather brings to
the sufferers of extreme cold.
Harvey came over that
evening. His classes finished he
came rushing into the apartment more excited than usual. “I remember”, he said ” I remember when
I was a student here and the first day of spring when I too was at the Union. I didn’t go to class. But now, I am a professor and I had to
go to class. HAHAHA” he laughed joyfully. “And I gave two thousand years of
Egyptian history today” he said.
“HAHAHA”. He went on
happier than I had ever seen him.
Two thousand years and only three students were sitting in the
auditorium taking notes.
“HA HA” he laughed and left
us in the same hurried manner that brought him into our midst. Even though I was gripped
by fear at an impeding academic doom I too laughed as I pictured him writing
more frenzied than ever as his love of knowledge and his instant understanding
of the down side of being a professor converged.
He never tested us on Egypt. The final was on Iran, Iraq Syria and another country that I don’t remember
now.
I had a solid A going into
the final.
I remember taking my class
notes with me to study for the final down by the lake. I was with my friend Ben.
We were playing around and the wind came and my notes went into the
lake. We retrieved them but they
were compromised and I used some one else’s notes to study for the exam.
I didn’t think too much about
this because with an A going into
he final I was guaranteed a C in the course and that was okay with me. A C or an occasional B. I wasn’t known as a student. I cut classes regularly and rarely
studied. I went to college to
develop my mind, not to gain knowledge per se. And grades were an unwelcome part of the process.
Again we were at diner when
Harvey rushed upstairs, he had my
test paper in his hand. He
didn’t’ throw it at me. He held it above us as he yelled down
onto the tops of our heads, the papers rattling.
“I didn’t believe it”, he
said. “ I had to get
hold of your test to see for myself. How did you do this, how did you get a D on my test. You knew it all. You were my best student” he yelled. How did this happen!”
And then he said words that
stayed with me for the rest of my life. He said.
“You are sick:,
locking his eyes into mine. “You are a very sick lady!” then he turned away and rushed
out of the apartment angry, disappointed.
Finished. He was finished
with us, with me.
He was right.
At the moment of Harvey’s
retreat punctuated by his flamboyant nature, his energy his unabashed
expression of what he cared most about
I was brought into an
awareness that changed my life forever. The next semester I took a course in
Personality 101 and for extra credit I wrote a paper what has been used by many. I wrote a seemingly simple essay
on why I need to fail and ended by affirming that success is still possible.
I remember standing in my
kitchen at home. My mother was
doing laundry downstairs. I held the report card in my hand, the A in
Personality 101 bold on the page.
And I was afraid afraid to show it to her.
I remember standing in that
ambivalent state when the world seems to be on an edge and I remember
simultaneously thinking about Harvey, how he ran down the stairs all a
flutter, and I went downstairs and
gave my mother my report card and quickly as quickly as I could I ran back up
and out of the house, feeling on
my own, ready to tackle the world.
Thank you Harvey for giving
me an adult life filled with ideas
and a kind of fanatic energy that often defies reason.
With the fondest of
memories………
Linda Glasser Zises
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