Military Service And Special Assignments Leslie W.
Trowbridge April, 1995 Shipping
Overseas – India Stint Mohanbari, India and Chengkung,
China Special Assignments – Case
Institute Special Assignments –
Bowdoin College Special Assignments – The
Triple – T Project Special Assignments –
President of NSTA Special Assignments
– Sabbatical in Taiwan – 1977 Special Assignments –
Assignment in Guam - 1967 Special
Assignments – Assignment in Guam continued Special Assignments –
Second Trip to Taiwan - 1983 Special Assignments –
3rd, 4th trip Taiwan 1984 Special Assignments –
Trip to Saudi Arabia - 1989 Special Assignments –
Fifth Trip to Taiwan - 1994 Special Assignments –
Sixth Trip to Taiwan - 1995 Special
Assignments – Consulting in Cairo – 1994 Military Service As described in “Life and Teaching”, Sept, 1992,
my military service began in July, 1942, when I joined the U.S. Air Force as an
aviation cadet at the University of Chicago. I arrived in Chicago by train from
Junction City, Wisconsin in early July and went to the Windermere Hotel, near
Lake Shore Drive on the south side of Chicago. There were about 150 cadets in
the class to which I was assigned. All of us had completed our Bachelor’s
Degrees before being accepted in the Aviation Cadet Program. Our task was to
learn weather observation and forecasting and to achieve the rank of Second
Lieutenant in approximately 10 months. Classes were held at the Institute of
meteorology at the University of Chicago. Our instructors were academicians in
meteorology who had been assembled to train prospective meteorologists for the
U.S. Air Force. The officer in charge of our group was Captain
William Starbuck, a short, feisty, infantry officer. To a naïve young private,
he was very intimidating, but fortunately I didn’t have much direct contact
with him. For the first month or so, we spent much time marching and drilling,
marching and drilling on the football field. The captain selected a few cadets
to act in his behalf to lead the drilling and marching in platoons. I enjoyed
the drilling to some extent as long as I was not called upon to give orders. The
rest of the day was given over to keeping our rooms ready for instant
inspection, writing letters, eating, and general “B S ing” Soon classes started and we were hurtled into a busy
schedule of study, classes, tests, drilling, map drawing, eating and sleeping.
On weekends we were provided with transportation to several USO clubs in the
area, and were given free time to use as we wished. After a month or so, the
whole contingent was moved into the International House on the U of Chicago
campus. Here we had separate rooms, shared with a roommate, a lounge, game
rooms, and other amenities. Not a bad life for a “Private”! In January, brother Bob also was admitted to the aviation
cadet program. While he was in a later class, he went through essentially the
same routines as I did. We saw each other occasionally, shared letters from home
(Our parents were faithful letter-writers), and compared notes. Brother Charles
was now out of high school and was helping Dad and Mother on the farm in
Wisconsin. Bob’s stay at the University of Chicago was interrupted in the
spring of 1943, when he transferred to a flight training school in Murfreesburo,
Tennessee. From that point on, he was in pilot training and trained at several
air bases in the south, including Biloxi, Mississippi and others. He spent the
war years in the States ferrying aircraft from one part of the U.S. to another.
The faculty of the University of Chicago who were involved in the aviation cadet
program in many cases were world-renowned meteorologists. Among these was Dr.
Carl Gustav Rossby, a Scandinavian who was famous for his theory of “long
waves in the westerly’s” which helped to explain the cyclical nature of
storms crossing the middle latitudes. His ideas led to the discovery of the
“Jet Stream” during World War II. Another professor was Dr. Herbert Riehl, a Native of
Germany, who taught us Dynamic Meteorology. This was a very mathematical subject
and made use of differential equations to describe the movements of air under
different conditions of temperature, pressure, and relative humidity. In
addition to the difficulty of the course, Professor Riehl’s English was
fractured and hard to understand. His was probably my most difficult course.
Another well known professor was Dr. Horace Byers, a synoptic meteorologist.
(This means someone who is interested in the daily weather changes, forecasting
the weather a few days in advance, and keeping track of the day-by-day changes
at the surface and aloft) his was a very practical course because it dealt
directly with the kinds of problems and tasks each of us would face when we were
stationed at an air field forecasting for flights across mountains, oceans, and
continents. A laboratory was held every day in which we studied weather
charts, drew weather maps, drew isobars, plotted data on the nearly 200 stations
in the United States, and made forecasts based on the maps we had drawn. This
was a most interesting class and very practical. A young lady in the class, not
an aviation cadet, but a civilian student, studied all the same classes as the
cadets did. Many years later, I was interested to read that she had married the
instructor, Horace Byers. After some years, she divorced him and married Robert
Simpson, The couple then became very interested in tropical cyclones and
hurricanes and wrote several articles in meteorology journals about their
findings. They flew across the Atlantic and Pacific several times and
photographed the clouds. One I remember showed that in the tropics, clouds often
formed in “streets”, long rows of clouds in a line for thousands of miles. Sometime in November or December, all of my class assembled
outdoors near Harper Hall and had a group picture taken. I still have a copy of
that photograph. I can probably remember only about 10 percent of the
individuals at this time. (or less!) As with any group of boisterous young men, there is always
a lot of camaraderie that develops in their free time. Some were good story
tellers and availed themselves of a willing audience very often. The stories
would not fit in a polite company, but formed one of my most memorable
experiences. Hearing this varied group of young men, black, white, or yellow,
from all corners of the United States, tell their stories in dialect and with
gestures and drama, made for some uproarious occasions. At Christmas time, most of the cadets went to their
respective homes, as I did. However, a few stayed around the University of
Chicago or took just short breaks. Those who stayed formed a group and had an
informal group picture taken. I suppose Bob and I both spent a couple of weeks
at home, eating home cooked meals and helping out with the firewood making and
other chores. In May’43, my class had finished its concentrated course
was ready to graduate. I invited my parents to come to Chicago for the
graduation. Dorothee was also invited to attend. When my parents arrived in
Chicago, they were to call me so that I could give them instruction as to how to
get to the International House and the graduation ceremonies which were held in
the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Not being familiar with city telephone systems,
since we did not have a telephone on the farm in Wisconsin, they misdialed and
were unable to get me. It all worked out OK and they finally arrived at the
International House on time, and had a chance to meet Dorothee – the first
occasion for this event. All but a few of the 150 cadets got their commissions
and diplomas for completing the program successfully. After the ceremonies, all
of the new offices were issued officer uniforms and were given about $600 in a
cash allowance to get them to their duty assignment. My assignment was at Marfa,
Texas, at an air force training base. I was to be the full time meteorologist in
charge of the weather station there. This was a base that trained pilots for
twin-engine aircraft. The base was located in southwest Texas about 50 miles
from the Mexican border just east of the Pecos Mountains. The very first day of my duty assignment, a thunderstorm
dropped copious hail, about ¾ inch in diameter. Unfortunately, about 90 planes,
AT-17’s, were caught in the hail storm while tethered on the field. The hail
punctured the wings and fuselages of these canvas-covered planes and made them
inoperable. An entire class of pilots-in-training had to be sent to Roswell, New
Mexico to complete their training. What an auspicious beginning for a new
meteorologist on the air base! I had one of two occasions to fly with the pilots from the
air base, and benefited from the low altitude flights through the various cloud
layers that I was supposed to be forecasting. The weather was generally quite fair, the climate was dry
in west Texas, and the skies were usually clear with good visibility. On one
occasion, I decided to fly in a small plane that was making a triangular route
from Marfa to Chihuahua to San Antonio and return to Marfa. This took the better
part of a day considering the slow progress of the AT-17’s and the distances
involved – about 1000 miles. We stopped in San Antonio for lunch and
refueling. The trip was uneventful but instructive for me because it was my
first glimpse of the endless, dry, cactus and arroyo-filled landscape below us,
partly in Texas and partly in Mexico. After about two months at Marfa, I received orders to
report to Camp Anza, California (near Riverside), to be equipped and prepared
for an overseas assignment. This was exciting news because it would give promise
of “really getting into the war” and contributing my small bit as a weather
officer. On the appointed day, I took a bus to Alpine, Texas, where I boarded a
train for California. It was a sleeper, as I recall (my first such experience),
and our route took us through Gallup, New Mexico. This had meaning to me because
Dorothee had told me3 that she spent some time in Gallup and visited the Navajo
Indian tribes there. After a day and a night, I arrived in Riverside, California
where I was met and transported by bus to Camp Anza. To my surprise, I met
several of my classmates from the University of Chicago Aviation Cadet program
with whom I had taken classes the previous winter. We had a happy reunion and of
course were terribly curious as to where our overseas assignment would take us. Our stay at Camp Anza was about three weeks, as I recall.
This gave us a chance to see Los Angeles, Hollywood, Riverside, and other nearby
cities. Of course we spent much of the time getting outfitted for overseas,
including new uniforms, shoes, insignia, getting shots, signing payroll
documents, taking out insurance, and a dozen other routine tasks. This reminds me of something that took place when I was at
Marfa. Our pay as an officer was good so I made some purchases I ordinarily
would not have made (I was a pretty frugal sort!). One of these was a wristwatch
that cost about $50, quite a lot for those days, but I figured I would need a
good watch for my duties as a weather officer. The watch was a wind-up type
(quartz-crystals and tiny batteries were not common then), and it had a luminous
dial. It really worked well, was visible at all hours of night or day and kept
good time. I wore this watch through my entire period in the service, and in
fact wore it for about 30 years after I returned to teaching. An interesting
event happened with this watch many years after I was out of the service. I took
it off my wrist on a particularly hot day and hung it over the shift lever in my
car while I went to work for several hours. The sun beat down on the front seat
of my car all day and when I returned in the evening, my watch was still in
place but all the radioactive material on the hands and number of the dial had
sort of melted and run down the face of the dial. I took the watch to a jeweler
who replaced the dial and presumably had painted the luminous dial as I
instructed him. But later I discovered that he had carefully painted all the
numbers, 1 – 12, but had forgotten to paint the hands of the watch. So now I
have a watch that still runs but is useless as a luminous dial because of that
oversight! Well, I use the watch in my classes when I wish to demonstrate
radioactivity with a Geiger counter. It really sets the instrument off! Such
radioactive dials are outlawed now. Finally the day of embarkation came for our trip overseas.
My recollections of the trip across the Pacific Ocean are described in the next
section. There were about 5000 troops – enlisted men and officers,
who boarded the Hermitage in Los Angeles Harbor for the trip overseas. None of
us had a clear idea of where we were headed, except that it made sense that it
was somewhere in Asia or the South Pacific. We soon began our trip and settled
into a routine that was to last about 45 days. We headed in a southwesterly
direction in relatively calm seas. Officers had cabins shared with one or two
roommates. Enlisted men had bunks in the hold, about four bunks high, and it
appeared to be quite crowded. They also had their own eating facilities, apart
from the officer’s mess. It seemed a bit unfair, but that seems to be the
established benefits of rank in the military services. Officers were assigned duties as O.D.’s (Officers of the
day). This meant spending a 24 hour period with the enlisted men, censoring
their mail, checking on the general conditions, and taking care of any
emergencies that might develop. I think there were lifeboat drills to attend t,
also. The mail censoring at first seemed to be routine duty, but as it wore on,
it became rather onerous and tedious. It was our task to clip out of letters any
references to location or possible destination. There of course was a lot of
speculation as to where we were going and no one had any solid information, so
it was mostly rumors. If the Japanese had any access to this kind of
information, it probably would have misled them enough to shorten the war! I was not particularly bothered by seasickness, even after
we got well away from land where the great ocean swells set up a rhythmic pitch
and roll to the ship’s motion. I think the enlisted men in the hold had a
tougher time, mainly because of the gradual accumulation of unpleasant smells of
food, diesel fuel, and human bodies packed together. Showers were available and
I think were periodically enforced but still the atmosphere became rather fetid
after a while. But no one suffered greatly on the trip. There was plenty
of food, reading matter, crap games, and bull sessions to keep everyone occupied
most of the time. Lots of letters were written with the expectation that they
would be mailed at the first port of call. No mail was received, of course, and
those men (there were no women on board, to my knowledge) who had personal
problems or expectations when they left the mainland had to wait until they
arrived at their destination to receive any word of their disposition. The weather gradually became warmer as we sailed southward.
About twenty days after embarkation we reached the equator. For those of us who
were experiencing the crossing of the equator for the first time, a special
initiation was in store. This consisted of tricks and pranks played on us by the
“seasoned” crew. A canvas slide was rigged up and we had to slide down it
into a tank of saltwater, while being deluged with sea water along the way. At
the end, we had to “drink” a foul mixture of some concoction. There was a
lot of hilarity and good humor, and a lot of fun was had by all – the
perpetrators and the victims alike. At the end we received a document that said
we were members of the Davy Jones Society and entitled to all the privileges
attached thereto. What those were, I never found out! Our first stop was in Wellington, New Zealand. Our reason
for traveling so far south was because of the danger of Japanese submarines in
the South Atlantic. The Japanese had succeeded in capturing most of the islands
of the South Pacific and were threatening Australia. While the U.S. was
gradually halting their advance and even turning them back after the Battle of
Midway, there was still danger of troopship sinking’s at the hands of Japanese
submarines. We traveled under blackout conditions most of the trip but
encountered no sightings of submarines to my knowledge. Wellington is a medium sized city on the west coast of one
of the New Zealand islands. Our stop was very brief but we were able to
disembark for a day. Several of us decided to explore a park in the city,
located up on a moderate hill. We engaged a taxicab which was powered by
charcoal (gasoline was in short supply, or perhaps unobtainable at that time).
We learned that charcoal-powered cabs were lacking in power and at one point
were asked to get out of the cab and help push it up to the top of the hill. Our next stage in the trip was to round the island of
Tasmania, which is south of New Zealand and Australia. At latitude of about 45
degrees South in August, the temperature was quite cold, and watching the waves
from the deck of the ship and counting the porpoises, of which there were
plentiful, was an enjoyable but brisk experience. There were also many flying
fish and some with some kind of luminescence that made the ocean look
fascinating at night. Temperatures warmed up a bit as we traveled northward
toward Perth, Australia, on the west coast. We stopped there also for a couple
of days and had a chance to explore the city. Perth looked much the same as any
U.S. city with many pedestrians on the streets – all of whom were friendly to
us but spoke in a rather unrecognizable form of English – at least to our
ears. Our next stint was through the Indian Ocean to the city of Bombay, India. There we stopped several days and waited for transshipment to another ship – a British vessel that was to take us to Karachi, India. At that time, Karachi was an Indian city. It is now part of Pakistan, and is located at about latitude 30 North, I would guess. Our stay in Karachi lasted about three weeks, as I recall.
We stayed in rather open barracks or tents. Our washing facilities were outside,
and I remember shaving with a safety razor at a long trough with running water.
I don’t remember the food but I expect it was army fare and served us very
well. One incident I recall was an effort to pass the time and
relieve the boredom until our train was ready to leave. A number of us decided
to rent a boat and go out fishing on the Arabian Sea. Everything went as
arranged, except the gentile swells in the ocean brought on a headache and
nausea for me. So I didn’t enjoy the day and I don’t even remember whether
anyone of the group caught any fish. I spent the entire day lying on the bottom
of the flat-bottomed boat and the other passengers picked their way over me as
they moved around. At last we were ready to board the train for our trip
eastward. It was an interesting trip and the whole thing lasted about two weeks.
We went northward for several hundred miles, then turned eastward and followed
the valley of the Ganges River until we got to near Calcutta. Officers had what
were termed “sleeping cars” which were simply regular cars with hard wooden
benches along the side on which one could lie down, using clothing for pillows
and blankets. Food was served at mealtimes by stopping the train on a siding and
the quartermaster corps set up soup kettles, stoves, tables, and tin ware for us
to eat on. I imagine the cooks purchased food from the natives in the villages
to supplement the army fare. At any rate, we suffered no hardships and enjoyed
the ever-changing scenery in route, from plains to mountains and river valleys
as we progressed on our route. When we arrived near Calcutta, we needed to cross the
Ganges River in order to head northeastward toward Assam Province where we were
to be stationed. We did this by transferring all our belongings to a number of
ferries which took us across the river. From the ferries, we put all our
belongings on board a narrow gauge railroad and proceeded up the tracks.
Accommodations were about the same as before. We saw lots of animals such as
monkeys of different kinds, working elephants, and birds. We kept looking for
tigers but failed to see any. Children constantly begged for “baksheesh”
through the open windows of the train whenever it slowed down. All in all the
trip was interesting and not too uncomfortable. We made one stop at a British
rest comp where we could take showers and get rested up. Our destination was in extreme northeast Assam province at
a town called Dibrugarh near the airbase of Mohanbari where we were to be
stationed. This was a jumping off place for Army Transport Command planes bound
for China, carrying oil and supplies for the armies of Chiang Kai-Shek in Yunnan
Province, China. We were put up in doubled-walled tents, with wooden floors.
While it rained a bit, the tents were dry and comfortable. Two officers shared a
tent and had a “bearer”, an Indian civilian who brought us water, swept the
floors, made our beds, and ran errands. I remember our orders to the bearer were
always “Jaldhi, jaldhi”, which meant “Faster, faster”. Not a very
charitable order, to say the least, for our hardworking bearer. I learned one
Hindu phrase which I now remember. It was “Ap ka nam ka hai”, which means
“what is your name”. I remember using this phrase on David several years
later, after he had spent three years in Nepal in the Peace Corps. I remember my
surprise when He answered “David Trowbridge”. So there must have been a
close similarity between the languages spoken in Nepal and in India. Our airbase was set among tea plantations, and walking to
work every day was a pleasant experience. It seems the tea could be harvested
continuously by patient tea leaf pickers who bent over the waist-high bushes and
picked the tenderest, smallest leaves for their collecting bags. Workers around
the air field performed their ablutions in the morning by taking showers under
waist-high water faucets by squatting on their haunches under their grimy cloth
wrap which constituted their main article of clothing. They brushed their teeth
vigorously by breaking off a tea bush branch and using that with water as a
toothbrush. Our duties at the airbase were to prepare maps and charts, make
forecasts of the weather, and convey our knowledge of the route conditions over
the “hump” to the pilots as they readied themselves for their flight. Their
cargo consisted of oil drums, medical supplies, food, clothing, weapons,
ammunition, and other necessities for the Chinese armies in the field in China.
At this time, the Japanese had conquered nearly all of central and southern
China. The Chinese armies under Chiang Kai-Shek were ensconced in the western
mountains near Chengtu and Kunming and were defending themselves against the
advancing Japanese. The “Burma Road” was being constructed through the
Himalayas in northern Burma, but it would be many months before it was
completed. The “Hump Route” was the only viable way of supplying the Chinese
armies during this period. So I guess our services in that effort were
worthwhile. My officer roommate was Clayton Pohley, an intelligent and
energetic meteorology officer. We lived together in the tent described earlier
and had a good relationship. We took jeep trips to another nearby airbase at
Chabua on some occasions. These were exciting because of the uncertain
connecting roads (trails really). Driving them at night by the light of the moon
– our only illumination except for the headlights of the jeep – was a
hair-raising adventure. Fortunately we were in a safe area without any
enemy troops within a thousand miles of us. The climate was cool but not frigid during the winter of
1943-44. Our tents were confortable. I don’t remember what kind of heat we had
but it probably was charcoal braziers. As I recall, I spent quite a bit of time
at the weather station, our work place - and since the station was on 24 hour a
day operation, each of the officers and men had a rotating work schedule so
quite a few nights were spent on duty at the station. Before our arrival at the
air base, the weather station had been operated by enlisted men with a staff
sergeant in charge. This staff sergeant had been there perhaps only nine months
or so, but to our view, this seemed like a lifetime. Consequently we looked at
him with awe and reverence. He was surely one of the “old timers”. The
rotation system back to the States which was designed to keep up morale and
provide a steady turnover of personnel was designed around a “point system”.
Each month counted for so many points until the required number was obtained and
the officer or enlisted man could then look forward to being returned to the
States, and thenceforth being reassigned to some other duty. So a great deal of
conversation was spent in discussing one’s earned points and one’s prospects
of going home. Life in Mohanbari was pleasant and not overly strenuous. We
were able to go into town (Dibrugarh) for sightseeing and shopping for whatever
was interesting and available. I remember one trip in which we saw a group of
service men gathered around a native who was performing some kind of service for
the curious service men. Upon closer inspection, we learned that the Indian was
removing small pebbles, about the size of a small pea, from the ears of the
occupant who was seated in a chair like a dental chair. Of course, a small fee
was charged. We were perplexed as to how one could have an earful of small
pebbles that needed to be removed. There was the possibility, of course, that
the “operator” put the pebbles in himself, before removing them! All officers carried 45 caliber automatic pistols as side
arms, even though we were not in a combat area, I remember I carried mine with
pride and as a matter of course would put it on when dressing for work in my
uniform. However, I never had to use it. But one evening, while working at the
weather station, all of us heard a rather low, moaning noise coming from some
distance away. The immediate explanation for this sound was “wolves”! On
thinking back, this was ridiculous, because to my knowledge, no wolves were even
found in that part of the world. I am embarrassed now by what steps I took on
that occasion. As ranking officer on duty I deemed it my duty to investigate
this strange sound, and so had an enlisted man drive me in the station jeep out
into the darkness, toward the moaning sound. As we drove toward a wooded area,
it seemed the sound became louder. I ordered the driver to stop and I alighted
from the jeep, pointed my pistol in the direction of the sound and fired. (This
was the only bullet ever fired from my pistol while it was in my possession!)
Needless to say, it was a stupid thing to do and I shudder to think what the
repercussions would have been for me if by chance I had hit something. At any
rate, we then climbed back into the jeep and returned to the weather station –
keeping mum about what had transpired. As I remember the sound stopped after the
incident – for what reasons, I will never know. Perhaps the sudden firing of a
gun discouraged whoever or whatever was making the noise and he? it? She?
Gracefully retired for the night! Mohanbari, India and Chengkung,
China I stayed at Mohanbari air base for nine months, from
September, 1943 to June, 1944. I enjoyed the work there and felt this was a good
place to serve out my service time in the Air Force. By this time I had
accumulated ten points and could look forward to being rotated when I had
accumulated fifteen more, or a total of 25 points, as I recall. The work was
interesting and I had made some good friends among the weather men and the
pilots. Of course, I was in a rather secure position, different from the pilots
and air crews who had to brave the weather over the hump as they flew at 20,000
to 30,000 feet above those formidable mountains. Thunderstorms were wild and
vicious, especially as spring and summer arrived, because it was then that the
seasonal monsoon flow reached northern India and the rising air over the 25,000
foot mountains produced much rain, ice, violent vertical drafts and towering
thunderstorms. Some thunderstorm clouds reached 50-60 thousand feet in height,
much too high to be flown over by the C-46’s and C87’s that were the
designated carriers of supplies over the hump. Frequently, planes were lost
under these conditions. Crews would bail out of the floundering planes in the
tall thunderstorms and parachute to the ground. All was not well, however, even
if they reached the ground safely, because there were “headhunters” in the
Naga Hills in Burma, who would capture the downed crews and turn them over to
the Japanese. Many crews escaped this fate, however, and made their way slowly
through the jungles back to their air base in India. Occasionally, a crew member
would reappear at the Mohanbari air base, usually with a long beard, bedraggled
uniform, and deficient about twenty pounds in weight. He would then be restored
to health in a few weeks and be sent out again on another delivery mission. Such
was the life of an Air Transport pilot! One of the personnel at the air base where I was stationed
had brought a small, two row button accordion with him from the States. I was
surprised and delighted to learn of this, because I had learned to play such an
instrument in my teens, and actually had a similar instrument back home in
Milladore, Wisconsin. He let me play it in our leisure time. I think I could
play it better than he could. My repertoire was only polkas and fast waltzes,
and I forget what kinds of songs he played. At any rate, we enjoyed each
other’s company and shared interest in the accordion. I remember one day in a
philosophical mood, he told me that I would probably withstand the rigors of
army life and come out without losing my sanity, because I could always resort
to playing the accordion for entertainment! For whatever it was worth, this bit
of ruminating was comforting. In late May, 1944, I received orders to transfer to
Chengkung, China, to perform my duties at a weather station there. This was at
an air base designed for receiving the goods and materials transported over the
hump to supply the Chinese armies in the region. So I said goodbye to my friends
in India and flew across the hump to my new assignment. It was an unexciting
flight on that particular day, for which I was grateful. I was able to see at a
distance some of the highest mountain peaks in the world to the north of our
route, including Mt. Everest, K-2 and others. Arriving in Chengjung, I met two
Air Force officers, one in the weather service as I was, and the other in the
quartermaster corps of the Army Transport Command. The first was Lt. Morse, a
friendly and likeable man who would be working with me in the weather station.
The other was Lt. McQuistion, a classmate from the Chicago Aviation Cadet
program, from which I graduated. He, however, had been assigned to a
Quartermaster unit, because the supply of weathermen by now had exceeded the
demand. Both of these officers were pleasant to be around and we shared many
hours of conversation and socializing. I remember one of these conversations. It
is funny how certain things stick in the mind. We were talking about golf. I
related how my cousin Clifford and I would play golf in the cow pastures at our
farm in Milladore, using homemade clubs and pebbles for golf balls. But I
pronounced the word ”gulf “ instead of “golf”, and McQuistion took me to
task – playfully. I wondered why I used that pronunciation and decided it was
the way my mother pronounced it. Another word he kidded me about was
“anyhow” which I pronounced “ennahow”, which I am sure is the way Mother
pronounced it at home. I have often wondered why people were able to pinpoint my
location of birth and upbringing – because I was just sure that Midwesterners
had an unaffected speech without any accent whatever! Our work at Chengkung was uneventful – no air raids, no
sounds of firing, nothing that would give any indication a war was going on. We
went into the city of Kunming on occasion and had a taste of Chinese food, using
chopsitcks to eat it with. On our way into the city we saw an airfield runway
being built, to accommodate even larger planes than the C-46’s. Perhaps it was
in anticipation of the B-29’s which were coming into production at that time.
These planes were to be stationed at Chengtu, an air base several hundred miles
to the north of our location in Yunnan Province. The thing that interested us
about the airfield construction was that all the work was done by hand by
Chinese peasants carrying “yo-yo” sticks over their backs. These were
balanced poles with a basket at each end of the pole and carried over the
shoulder. The load consisted of small and large rocks, dirt, and other materials
needed in construction of the air field. Thousands of workers – men and women
– made up the work force. Some were carrying babies on their backs as well as
the heavy yoyo. I didn’t see any tools larger that a pick or shovel for the
entire job. Yet in time the work got done, the flat runway materialized and soon
planes were landing on it. Other observations of a less pleasant nature were also
experienced. One day a number of propeller planes were warming up on the runway
near our weather station (there were no jets at that time). Workmen on the field
were doing their various tasks. One unobservant workman walked into the spinning
propeller blade of a plane. No need to describe what happened to him! Most of the occupants of the barracks where I lived spent
their weekends in Kunming – fulfilling their needs as it were. I would observe
them upon their return from town in the lavatory using prophylactics and other
measures to clean up after their night out. Various nasty ailments were common
among those who were a little careless in their horizontal entertainments. Being
the naive person that I was at that time, these observations were more
perplexing and educational than stimulating to me. I remember that one day each month was significant in that
it was payday. As a first lieutenant, I was receiving a few hundred dollars a
month – I forget the exact amount. I had allocated most of this to the
purchase of savings bonds and a portion to be sent to a bank account in the
States. I reserved a small amount for my needs but it wasn’t much as most
everything was taken care of. No food to buy, no rent to pay, no car to drive.
Nothing to spend my money on as I didn’t play poker or shoot craps. So during
my 29 months in overseas service, I acquired a small nest egg, around $6,000,
which I used to buy a car and a small house in Wisconsin Rapids after my
discharge from the service. Some fellows did much better than that, not from
frugal savings so much as from lucky poker winnings. It seemed the usual
pattern, more common among the enlisted men than among the officers, I think,
was to take your pay on payday, immediately get into a poker game and take your
chances on winning more of losing what you had been paid for the month. Some
were good at it and made loot. Others were on a perpetual losing streak and a
day or so after payday would be broke and would have to borrow money for even
small items like toothpaste, cigarettes, etc. Our food at the air force mess was acceptable army fare and
we thrived on it. As in India, foodstuffs were purchased from the local
population to supplement the regular army rations. In one instance, this
resulted in a strange ingredient occurring in beans served at table; we found
numerous little pebbles about bean size in the bean soup and other bean dishes.
This resulted, they told us, from purchasing beans at the local market and
paying for them by weight, Of course the local farmers wanted as much weight as
possible so added a certain portion of pebbles to add weight. Not too harmful,
except for the crunching sound of a chipped tooth when eating our meals! Pilots who found themselves ordered to fly Chinese recruits
from place to place in southwestern China were usually none to happy. At the
altitudes they had to fly to avoid the mountainous terrain, and without oxygen
for passengers, many of the soldiers got sick and threw up their rice and
vegetable meals in the confined space of the cargo planes. This of course made a
horrible stench and caused lots of grief in cleanup after the flight was over. My stay at Chengkung lasted about twelve months. Time
seemed to pass quickly, and the problems of forecasting weather with very
limited reporting stations were rather perplexing. Mainly we were concerned with
return trips to India for the transport planes. Since there was a steady train
of incoming flights that were delivering supplies to China, the best information
we received was from the pilots themselves who had just traversed the hump.
Other reports came by short wave radio from a few reporting stations in Tibet,
Manchuria, and Mongolia. Thinking back, it seems impossible that we were able to
give any accurate forecasts to the pilots at all. But air movements do have a
pattern to them, and I guess we relied more on common sense than anything else. In June, 1945, I received orders to proceed to Yankai,
China to take over the operation of a weather station there. This was at a small
air field with about fifty fighter bombers whose missions took them over
southeastern China, near the coast along the China Sea. The reason for these
missions was to bomb the railroad which the Japanese had constructed and were
using to bring supplies southward to their troops in Burma, Malaysia, and
Singapore. It was a vital supply line and to stop or hamper the transport of
goods along this railroad was an important objective for the Allies in the
China-Burma-India Theater. Our task as weather forecasters was to supply weather
information to the fighter-bomber pilots flying these missions. Our source of
weather data was sparse, but fortunately the area was to the east of our
location and since weather patterns move from west to east, we at least were
able to predict with some certainty that the weather we had at present would
soon arrive two or three hundred miles to the east of us. Also, we were not
plagued to the same extent with large thunderstorms as we were when dealing with
hump flights. An additional danger, however, was our closer proximity to
Japanese forces and the possibility that aircraft or even invading forces might
strike as far west as Yankai. Nothing like this happened, probably because the
Japanese were reaching the end of their expansionist period and were beginning
to feel the power of the pacific Fleet and Allied forces taking back the islands
which had been lost to Japan earlier in the war. As a matter of fact, the Allies
were on the offensive in their goal to invade Okinawa and possibly even the home
islands of Japan. So the Japanese armies were stretched to their limit and
weren’t very active in southeast China at this time. The two months of my stay in Yankai passed quickly, and
early in August, 1945, we received the astounding news that the Allies had
dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively. This news
raised the spirits of all the personnel at the air base and we began to wonder
how long the Japanese would be able to hold out. We didn’t have to wait long
to find out, because in about three days – around August 9, 1945, the
announcement was made that the Japanese had surrendered. Their long and
treacherous war plans came to an end and the Allies were victorious.
Preparations were soon made to accept their surrender in Tokyo Harbor on board
the U.S.S. Missouri with General MacArthur conducting the activities. Following
this a long period of occupation of the islands of Japan took place. I was not
involved in this because after the war was over, there was a great rush to
discharge all servicemen, and I had accumulated sufficient “points” to be
among the first to return to the States. Of course, I had to supervise closing
down the weather station and accounting for supplies, equipment, and other
materials in the station. This took about two weeks. Then I had orders to travel
to Calcutta and so flew there over a southern route that did not take us over
any mountains. I stayed in a British officer’s club near Calcutta for a couple
of weeks before being transferred to Karachi. There I boarded a ship that was
bound for the States. I was pleased to find that some of my acquaintances from
my Chicago training were also returning to the States on the same ship. The name
of our ship was the Conte Biancamano, an Italian ship of about 10,000 tons. We spent our time playing cards and performing certain
duties related to our rank, but the trip was much more relaxing than our
original trip from Los Angeles to Karachi. Since the war was over, we didn’t
have to worry about enemy submarines, blackouts were not required, and we could
generally enjoy a leisurely ride home. We traveled through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. This in
itself was an interesting experience. The trip through the canal took about a
day and we could observe the life along the canal in the daylight. After the
passage, we navigated the Mediterranean and were able to see the Grecian isles.
I remember one joke told on shipboard as we sighted white mountain peaks.
Someone said, ”Isn’t that Greece?” Someone else answered, “No, that is
just snow on the mountains” At the western end of the Mediterranean, we passed
Gibraltar, a fascinating sight. Many years later, I recall our view of the
“Rock of Gibraltar” whenever I see the ad for Prudential Life Insurance,
which uses the “Rock” as their logo. Our trip across the Atlantic to Newport Beach, where we
docked was uneventful. This was October and the sea was calm. We disembarked and
quickly went our separate ways by train and plane to our final destinations. I
traveled by train from New Jersey to Chicago, where I received my discharge
papers, and I suppose any money that was owed me. My first stop after that was
to see Dorothee at her home on Belmont Street in Chicago. Our correspondence
during my overseas stint had culminated in our engagement to be married, so we
went to a jeweler and picked out a ring to celebrate the occasion. I remember
Dorothee’s mother was interested in seeing for certain that a ring had been
purchased, as this meant I was serious in planning to marry her daughter. I then went by train to Junction City, Wisconsin, where my
folks picked me up and I was home at last. This was approximately December 6th,
so I had made it home for Christmas. The family was all in good health and busy
operating the dairy farm in Milladore. Charles was helping with the farm work
and it was easy to settle into farm chores, winter firewood making, and other
farm routines again. I am having trouble recalling about Bob, but I think he had
married before the war was over and was living with his wife, Ardis. They lived
in the “little” house on the farm for a while, and he worked for a lumber
company in Milladore and Rudolph, Wisconsin. Dorothee came to visit me at the farm at Christmas time and
met my parents – not for the first time because she had met them a few years
earlier when I graduated from cadet school in Chicago. She brought with her two
items as presents for me. One item was a pair of “modern” wooden skis and
the other was a pair of “modern” boots to ski in. I suppose they were the
latest thing in ski equipment in those days but they are certainly relics now. I
still have the boots, they still fit, and I use them on occasion for rough
outdoor work. In those days, we used rough leather straps on the skis. When we
moved to Colorado and started to ski the mountains, we outfitted ourselves with
“bear trap” bindings that one clamped his boots into. David, Tom and Edith
all used this type until we finally invested in some decent ski equipment. Dorothee was interested in our horses at the farm. One, old
grey Dick, was a gentle creature and we used to ride him for cultivating corn,
etc. One day she went for a ride on Dick, no saddle, just bareback. He started
to jog down the hill and she kept slipping farther and farther off until one
foot was touching the ground and the other was still on old Dick’s back. Lucky
she had long legs so she could manage those acrobatics! I finally caught up with
the horse and stopped him and everything was ok. During the Christmas vacation after my discharge from the
service, I began to consider applying for a teaching job. This was in December
of 1945 and January of 1946. Because there had been a shortage of teacher
candidates during the war, many positions were open, even though this was in the
middle of the school year. In a short time, I learned of a 7th-8th grade
position in the elementary school in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. I interviewed for
it and was accepted. While I would have preferred a high school position, I was
glad to get started again at the grade level in which I had had previous
experience before I went into the service. I taught all the subjects of the 7th
and 8th grades. The children were sons and daughters of rather wealthy parents
who worked in Chicago or Milwaukee and commuted by car or train to their work.
The children were rather unruly and spoiled. I didn’t find it a very enjoyable
teaching situation, except for the good friends I made among the faculty of the
elementary and high schools who taught in the same or nearby buildings. One of
these was Sheridan Ellsworth who taught other sections in the elementary school.
Sheridan was blind in one eye but it did not seem to hamper him in the slightest
degree. His wife, Lucille, was an amateur painter, who did an oil painting of
the lake shore of Lake Geneva and gave it to us. We still treasure it, because
it brings back memories of the beautiful lake setting. Dorothee and I were married on August 31, 1946, in the
Belmont Methodist Church in Chicago, Illinois, All of her family and most of my
family attended the wedding. My best man was my brother, Charles, who escorted
Dorothee’s sister, Elfriede. My cousin, Herbert Koerner also stood up
escorting Dorothee’s sister Hildegard. Dorothee’s father, Karl Kohring also
attended, and her mother, Charlotte Kohring and sisters Charlotte and Trudy,
attended, as well as her brothers Paul, Heinz, and Oswald. My mother and father
attended along with uncle and aunt George and Ella Uhlig, aunt Marie Trester.
Several other aunts, uncles and cousins were in attendance. After the reception,
which was a smorgasbord dinner, Dorothee and I went to the Edgewater Beach Hotel
along Lake Michigan, where we had what was designated as the “bridal suite”.
The next day we spent the day with an army buddy and his wife who had come to
Chicago on a vacation. They were Dick and Harriet Sweeney from Mt. Pleasant,
Michigan. We had the opportunity to visit them several years later and kept in
contact by Christmas cards, etc. for many years. They visited us in Greeley,
Colorado on at least one occasion. On the Monday following the wedding, Dorothee and I hooked
a U-Haul trailer to our 1941 Plymouth and drove to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, where
I had accepted another year’s appointment as 8th grade teacher. We moved into
an upstairs apartment owned by Mrs. Cook. I started teaching that very week, and
continued throughout the fall semester. While I enjoyed my job, my real desire
was to move into a high school position, for which my training had best prepared
me. So I began to look for a high school job and soon learned of a position at
Lincoln High School in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. I met with Mr. Floyd Smith,
the superintendent of Schools at Wisconsin Rapids, and he offered me a contract
to begin in January, 1947. We moved to Wisconsin Rapids during the winter vacation and
rented an upstairs apartment near the Wisconsin River. I began my teaching at
Lincoln High School the second semester and taught physics and senior science.
These were my favorite subjects and I enjoyed my new job. The high school had an
enrolment of about 1200 students, had lots of activities, a good basketball team
and football team, and other sports. I developed friendships with John Nelson
(History and American Government), Howard Junkman (Math), “Duke” Hornigold
(Chemistry), Aaron Ritchay (Principal), “Jake” Jacobson (English) and other
faculty members. In June, 1947, Dorothee and I purchased a small house on
8th St. South, about two miles from my school. We paid cash for it from my army
savings, and had enough left over to buy the furniture as well. The total cost
– house and furniture – came to $3,000. Then in the summer of 1947, we
decided we needed to enlarge the house so borrowed $2,500 from the Wood County
Bank and proceeded to build a 12 foot addition on the east end of the house,
install a bathroom, a coal burning furnace, and a water system. This improved
our quality of life and just in time – because on August 31, 1947, our first
son, David was born. In December, 1949, our second son, Tom, was born and in
November, 1951 our daughter, Edith, was born. We had good neighbors at 3400 8th
St. South whom we keep in contact with even today. Phyllis and Harold Sultze,
who still live in the same house as then, Margaret and Don Clement (Don passed
away in 1991), and Don and “Bunny” Hall. They had children about the ages of
our three so it was an enjoyable neighborhood to live in. We enjoyed our 7 ½ years in Wisconsin Rapids and in 1954,
decided to move to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where I could begin work on a doctorate
in science education. The events of my teaching career have been described in an
earlier document entitled “Life and Teaching” written in 1990. Special assignments. During the course of fifty years of teaching there were
many opportunities to engage in special studies, teaching stints, and institutes
related to my teaching duties. The first of these occurred in 1949, when I
applied for and received a General Electric Scholarship for High School Physics
Teachers. This was held in Cleveland, Ohio, at Case Institute of Applied
Sciences. About fifty physics teachers attended this institute. Its
purpose was to upgrade the knowledge and teaching skills of high school teachers
at a time when physics enrolments were dropping and the preparation of physics
teachers was declining. Many more physics teachers were teaching the subject
with minimal training. Large corporations like the General Electric Company
recognized the need to insure a supply of well-educated students who could enter
their work force and have at least the basic understandings and learning skills
to perform their tasks adequately. So their strategy was to upgrade the science
teachers as a first step. We lived in dorms at the Case Institute campus and had
renowned college physics teachers and General Electric scientists give
lecturers, do demonstrations, and conduct field trips for the group of teachers.
The institute lasted six weeks, and all expenses were paid by General Electric
Company. The experience was very interesting and worthwhile. Dorothee stayed in
Wisconsin Rapids with our son, David, who was almost two years old at that time.
At the conclusion of the course, Dorothee drove with David to Cleveland and we
traveled home together, stopping to visit Henry and Ruthann Brack who lived in
Richmond, Indiana. They also had their first child, Susan. We had a nice visit,
and I was subjected to a few “Henry: pranks. (He was a consummate practical
joker). One was to serve me at the dinner table with a fork that unexpectedly
would fold in the middle after a portion of food was put on it. Then he would
berate me for my clumsiness. Ruthann had to be in on this as well. A second
trick was to offer me a drink of lemonade in a glass that had tiny unnoticeable
holes around the lip edge. Of course, most of the liquid dribbled down my shirt
front when I attempted to drink. Again, Henry called my attention to how messy I
was when drinking. We all had an uproarious time and I immediately began
plotting my revenge for the time when they would visit us in Wisconsin Rapids.
That opportunity never came, unfortunately. Henry was a junior high school
teacher and taught in the same school his entire career. He and Ruthann retired
to Florida, and Henry died in 1990. At the institute in Cleveland, one professor, Dr. Richard
Sutton, made an impact on me with his enthusiastic demonstrations. Dr. Sutton
was from Haverford College and was known as the “jumping professor” because
of his enthusiastic performances at the front of the room, on top of the
demonstration desk, and other places. I learned many valuable physics
demonstrations which I used repeatedly in my own teaching, thereafter. I still
use them, as a matter of fact. Another incident I recall was a night time astronomy
lecture by a noted astronomer .After an hour of being enthralled with his
profound knowledge and stellar presentation, we were asked if we had any
questions. No one felt bold enough to put forth a question to this erudite man,
until finally one timid soul asked him, “How do you fix your flashlight so you
can point an arrow to the screen?”!!. The rest of us could have died with
mortification at the foolishness and inanity of this question. To bother a noted
scientist with such a question was the height of stupidity, we felt. Being a rather naïve young man, I was somewhat upset
with the other students living in the dorm with the GE group. They lived on the
third floor and we lived on the first floor in our respective rooms. At night,
we repeatedly heard the “tap-tap-tap” of high heeled shoes ascending the
stairways to the boys’ rooms. After a period, the downward “tap-tap-tap”
of high heeled shoes would be heard again. Even I in my innocence could imagine
what was taking place. I engineered a meeting of our group with the boys on the
third floor and we complained about the situation, even intimating a report to
the higher-ups if it didn’t stop. It came to a halt, at least for the rest of
the summer so we were satisfied. (I can’t imagine how I gathered enough
courage to bring this up at the time, much less to organize a meeting to discuss
it. Must have been braver in my younger days!) The second opportunity for a summer institute occurred in
1959 when I was teaching at the University of Michigan, and was working on my
dissertation for the Ph.D. degree. I chose to compare the objectives of the
Physical Science Study Committee course on high school physics, which was then
being developed by the National Science Foundation, with the objectives of
traditional high school physics as it was being taught in the schools of the
U.S. To acquaint myself more fully with the PSSC course, I applied for a summer
institute at Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Main, in the summer of 1959. I was
accepted and traveled to Maine for a six week course. My roommate there was a
German high school teacher from Munich, Germany. I learned a lot from him about
the educational system in Germany, and the standards for high school physics
teaching there. Needless to say, I was impressed with their rigor. I was also
impressed with the quiet, effective performance of his electric shaver whereas
my American made shaver wheezed and clunked along, making a fearsome racket. I
began to appreciate German workmanship – at least on electric shavers! The course was very instructive and I obtained the needed
information for my dissertation – at least that which pertained to PSSC
physics. Also met a lot of new friends whom I would subsequently call upon for
information, etc. One relaxing event was a clambake on the beach one evening
with clams fixed the way easterners do it. Very delicious and tasty. In 1969, I applied for a one year leave to participate in a
project at New York University, dealing with teaching of elementary science and
preparing materials for that level. The condition was that I was to form a team
of three persons, myself as science educator, a science content person, and a
middle school teacher., I selected John Gapter, Biology professor at UNC as the
college person, and Leon Ukens, a junior high science teacher to represent the
middle grades. In the case of Dr. Gapter, he was able only to get a leave of
absence for two quarters from UNC, so I invited Dr. Ivo Lindaue to consider
going to New York the third quarter of the year. It worked out great, and I
think I can take some credit in the fact that both the college people became
knowledgeable and concerned about the plight of elementary science teacher
preparation, and subsequently held workshops, wrote grant proposal, and taught
courses to pre-service elementary teachers at UNC after their return. As for
Leon Ukens, he subsequently went back to New York University and secured his
doctorate in science education there. He now teaches at a university in Towson,
MD and has contributed significantly to science education in the U.S. through
his NSTA committee work, chairing conventions, writing, and the like. So I think
I gave him the needed professional boost at the right time to make him a
productive professional in science education in the country. It was a pleasant year in New York City. The culture shock,
coming from Greeley, Colorado, was significant. Edith had graduated from high
school in 1969 and she went grudgingly with us to New Your. She was leaving her
boyfriend behind. However, after a month or so, she found she liked the
excitement of New York City, obtained a job as a telephone operator for a year,
worked as a model, and fell in love with the environment. She is still there –
25 years later. Howard had finished the 6th grade in Greeley, so he entered the
7th grade in New York City at P.S. 77 in the center of Manhattan. Dorothee
obtained a job as a substitute teacher in a school nearby and completed her
first year of teaching amid the rigors of New York City public schools. Both
survived their experiences very well. Edie worked as a telephone operator. Tom
and David were both in college those years. During the year in New York City, we lived in two different
locations, both near Washington Square. We lived first on the 21dst floor of a
high rise apartment building where the nighttime view of the City was
spectacular. The arrangement with the owner of the apartment was to
“house-sit” his dwelling for six months while he toured Europe. In the
second semester we had a similar arrangement with another professor from New
York University. Dorothee is very resourceful in making these kinds of
arrangements. At one point in the year, we arranged to invite several
other science educators and college professors to a conference on elementary
science teaching. The National Science Foundation paid for this. The year passed
quickly and was a productive experience. Howard got to know city life, totally
different from life in Greeley. Edith decided during the year to pursue art
education at New York University and stayed on four years to complete her B.A.
degree. By that time, she was so enamored with the City that she could not have
been convinced to return to a small town like Greeley. Dorothee and I, however,
were glad to return to our university haunts in Colorado, but were glad of the
opportunity to see a different environment and life style. In 1975, I took the office of president of the National
Science Teachers Association. Upon conferring with the administration of UNC, it
was decided that I could take a leave of absence from UNC for a year to move to
Washington, DA where I could perform my duties a s president “on the scene”
rather than trying to function through innumerable airplane trips to the
capitol. Again, we were fortunate to find a family in Falls Church, Virginia,
that would let us live in their house for a year while they did research or
other work in the southern part of the United States. So we moved to Falls
Church in August, 1973. Howard was now a junior in high school and attended the
high school in Falls Church. My responsibilities as president of NSTA were many and
varied. I traveled to many conventions throughout the U.S., made many, many
friends, presided at a national convention in Chicago, conducted many meetings
of the NSTA board of Directors, worked for the National Science Foundation for
two months, and enjoyed all of it immensely. The highlight of our year came in January, 1974, when
Dorothee and I traveled to Leeds, England, where I gave the Macmillan Lecture on
Science Education, and was hosted by the British Association of Science
Educators. It happened to be in the midst of a national coal strike in England,
so we experienced a few cold rooms and cold water showers in our lodgings. We
also had the opportunity to travel to Trowbridge and Taunton, England where we
found evidence of our family forebears in both of these towns. From London, Dorothee and I took a train to Trowbridge in
southwestern England. We toured the town of about 50,000 but found little
evidence of any direct ancestors. We were guided by the genealogy, which I have
in my possession, called “The History of the Trowbridge Family in America”.
We took a few pictures and boarded the train again for Taunton, a bit further
down the line. We arrived in Taunton in the evening and looked for a hotel in
which to stay. After some searching, we located a pub and inn and sought out the
manager. We found a lady who agreed to let us stay for the night and we made
preparations to eat and retire. After getting comfortably in bed, we began to
hear music and loud noises from the floor below. After a bit, we decided it was
too early to retire anyway, so we dressed again and went downstairs, where we
found a dance going on with plenty of drinks and revelry. So we joined in, made
a few new friends, and were suddenly surprised to find the music and dancing
stopped promptly at 10:00 pm. This was their policy on weekend nights, so we
gratefully went back to bed and had a good night’s sleep. The next day, we had breakfast and began to tour the city
of Taunton – I would guess a city of 100,000 people. With our genealogy
knowledge and some old photographs of two churches that bad been attended by our
forebears in the 1600’s, we decided to attend the church service, since it was
a Sunday morning. We arrived late but sat through about half of the service
before it was finished. Then we introduced ourselves and asked about the story
of one Thomas Trowbridge having bequeathed a sum of money to the parish in the
1600’s. They said, “Oh, Yes. We have a plaque in the narthex commemorating
this bequest. We will show it to you”. So we were led to the narthex, and sure
enough, on one wall was a plaque about five feet tall and two feet wide that
noted that Thomas Trowbridge in 1620 had contributed the earnings from his
properties to the parish in perpetuity. This plaque is pictured in our genealogy
so we knew we had the right one. They told us the proceeds of this bequest were
still being distributed annually to poor members of the parish. What a record!
More than 370 years of continuity! At this point, I decided to take a picture of the plaque.
To get a good view, I stepped up on a nearby bench and pointed my camera – a
single lens reflex type. I pressed the button and – Wham! My right eve was
blinded, with black spots appearing and reappearing before it. What happened?
Upon inspection, I discovered I had put the flashbulb in backwards, facing my
eye, instead of the plaque. I corrected the problem and took another good one. This was the Mary Magdelene church of the Church of
England. We decided to walk to another church, a short distance away, which was
also mentioned in the genealogy. We arrived there after the service was over,
but found in the sanctuary an old, bent-over man, who was putting things away
after the service. Turned out he was the rector and after making our
introductions, he asked our business. But before we could respond, he pointed to
his chest on which there was a small amplifier, attached to ear plugs in his
ears. He meant to inform us to speak into the amplifier, which we did. So we
said, “Our name is Trowbridge. We have come from the United States to locate
the place from which our forebears came to the colonies in 1637”. He said,
“Oh, your are Trowbridges. You must be a prolific family. There have been many
Trowbridges come to visit us in Taunton. Some of them were even carrying big
books with the history of their family in them!” He of course was
referring to the genealogy I have mentioned above. There were only 100 copies of
that document publish in 1908, so they must have gotten distributed pretty
widely in the U.S. We wanted to take pictures of our trip to Taunton, so
carried our camera and made 25 or 30 snaps of various locations. It was late
afternoon when the film was filled (I thought), but I found when I started to
rewind it that it had never been attached to the winder and we hadn’t gotten a
single picture all day! The sun was bright, so we rushed to a “chemist” and
bought a new film, and started the process all over again, We rushed about the
city and retook the scenes as best we could remember them. Again we filled the
roll and this time it was successful, and we got a nice bunch of pictures at
last. After my talk at Leeds, which was well received, Dorothee
and I returned to the States and our home in Falls Church. As we flew over
Newfoundland, I saw from the plane window a large swath cut in the forest below
– perhaps a half mile wide, which to this day I do not know the reason for it.
It was too wide for a firebreak, and too straight to be a natural topographic
feature. Guess I’ll have to go back and look at it again! It reminds me that
at one time after the first trip of the Beatles to the United States, someone
asked them, “How did you find America?” They replied, “Easy, We just
turned left at Newfoundland!” In the spring of 1974, our national convention of NSTA was
held in Chicago, divided between the Blackstone and the Hilton hotels. Eighteen
months of preparation had gone into this convention. My program chairman was
Earl Sargent, a professor at Tulsa University, and a former student of mine at
UNC. More than 6,000 persons attended this convention – small by today’s
standards in which 18 – 20,000 people might attend a national convention. My
mother attended, Edith, Howard, and David attended, and several Chicago
relatives as well. Our immediate family had the presidential suite in the Hilton
Hotel – quite impressive for country hicks like ourselves. At one point, Bob
Silber, then executive secretary of NSTA invited me to attend a breakfast
meeting of some of his “friends” who wanted to plan some future activities.
I fell in with his plan and roused myself early to go to the “breakfast”. As
we opened the door from the elevator to the dining room, a great cheer went up
and all my former Greeley students plus many other friends were all ready to
give me a “roast”. What a surprise! I was completely taken in. At one point,
Jay Hackett said he would like to play a tape of all the “words of wisdom I
had uttered during my year as president”. He started the tape and we all
listened intently. Not a sound came out! Which of course was the whole point. David delivered a paper entitled “Science Teaching on the
Top of the World”, which was an account of his three years in the Peace Corps
in Nepal. The attendance was meager – mostly his relatives. My year ended in July at the Board meeting held in Colorado
Springs. My successor as president was Dr. Jim Rutherford, former head of
Science Education at New York University. Jim and I have been good friends for
many years, both before and after my year as president. At the handing over of
the gavel, Jim told a story about me. He said that “Les is a very sensitive
person. To illustrate how sensitive he is, I wanted to relate how I drove by his
house last week and he was out in the yard playing with a penguin. I said to him
he should probably take the penguin to the zoo. Les replied, “I did take him
to the zoo. He liked it and next week he wants to go to the ball game!” Our university at this time made it possible for faculty to
apply for a one – quarter sabbatical leave at full pay each five years. I
applied and chose to take the fall quarter, 1977. I made plans to travel
throughout the United States and visit other institutions with science education
programs to gain ideas of directions we might take in our own department. This
was approved by the administration. In July, 1977, I received a visit from a Taiwan educator,
Dr. Guo, Chorng Gee. He was visiting science education departments in the United
States and wished to talk with me, as chairman of Science Education at UNC. In
the course of our conversation, he mentioned that he was searching for someone
to come to his college in Taiwan, the Taiwan Provincial College of Education,
located at Changhua City. I told him I would be interested in an invitation and
he agreed to initiate the request at the National Science Council in Taipei. In a month, all the paper work was done, and Dorothee and I
made plans to go to Changhua in September, 1977, for one quarter of teaching. I
was to be assigned as Special Chair in the Department of Science and Mathematics
Education, and would be paid 18,000 NT dollars per month (approximately $450),
plus receiving housing and round trip air fare for Dorothee and myself. My tasks
were to team-teach a college level physics course with a Chinese professor, as
well as to give a series of seminars on science education for the faculty of the
College. While in Changhua, we lived in a faculty apartment on the
campus. It was spacious and comfortable. There was a small stream in front of
the apartment called the “Black Dragon” river. There were other faculty
members close by, including Dr. Guo and his family, who lived next door. We
cooked our own meals as there were frequent vendors of vegetables and fruits who
came by the apartment. The city was only about a mile through back streets where
Dorothee could purchase other food items. The faculty and other Chinese friends we met were very
congenial and helpful. My classes went well, and we enjoyed the semester, which
ended shortly after Christmas. A highlight of our stay in Changhua was a bus
trip around the entire island of Taiwan, taken in November, as the students who
were preparing to become teachers, were given an orientation trip to familiarize
them with the schools into which they were going. Dorothee and I thus learned a
great deal about the island, the lakes, the mountains and the scenic places. A faculty member at the college, Darmin Chiang, invited us
to spend a weekend at Tainan, the oldest city in Taiwan. It is located on the
west coast on the Formosa Strait, which separates Taiwan from mainland China.
This was an interesting experience as we visited several Confucius temples.
Confucius was a revered teacher, born about 550 B.C. His moral teachings became
a part of the religion of China, although Confucianism is not considered one of
the world’s religions, Tainan was first settled by the Portuguese. When we arrive at Changhua, we were pleasantly surprised to
learn that an American couple, Ron Mertz and Pam Devoe, were also assigned to
teach at the Provincial College. Ron was an instructor in Guidance and Pam was a
doctoral student in anthropology, gathering data for her dissertation. We got to
be good friends, went shopping and “restauranting” together, and enjoyed
each other’s company. We have kept in touch with them through the years and
have visited them at their home in St. Louis. They have also visited us in
Colorado – as recently as the summer of 1994. At the end of December, it was time to return to the U.S.
so Dorothee and I decided we would purchase out own tickets on the train to
Taipei, where we would board a plane for the States. This would relieve our
Taiwan friends from the responsibility of escorting us back to Taipei – a trip
of at least three hours one way. So we surreptitiously engaged a taxi to take us
to the train station and were waiting for the train. When we discovered our
colleagues from the college had somehow gotten wind of our departure. They
engaged a van and came to the railroad station to see us off! Even the president
of the college was among them. It happened to be raining gently as we waited for
the train, and the college president said, “See, even the skies are crying
because you are leaving us”! What a people!! We arrived back in the U.S. about January 1st, in time to
make plans for a trip to Wisconsin on February 3 to help celebrate my mother’s
80th birthday. While this account is a bit out of sequence, I shall
nevertheless describe our interesting experience in Guam in the summer of 1967.
At that time we had a student, Jack Fletcher, in our Science Education
Department at UNC. He was on a two year assignment in Guam and was attending
classes at UNC – either midway through his contract or perhaps before
beginning a second stint. He invited our family to Guam to conduct classes for
elementary teachers on the island. The significant fact about this was that the
entire family was invited, not just myself. At this time, David was 19, in his first year at Reed
College. Tom was a junior at the Lab School, Edie was a sophomore at the Lab
School, and Howard was in the 4th grade at the Lab school. An ideal time to go
on a family trip! The Fletchers had two children about the age of Howard. Since summers for David were an important time to earn
money for college, leaving for a summer in Guam posed a problem. However, the
president of the University of Guam, Tony Yamashita – a former student at UNC,
arranged to have David work in the Chemistry department at the university, so
this solved the problem of earnings for the summer. Our first trip over the pacific was interesting but uneventful. We stopped at Wake Island for refueling – a small, treeless spot of soil with an airport and a filling station! This island played an important role in World War II as a refueling stop as well. When we arrived in Guam, the Fletchers met us and informed us that the best way to overcome jet lag was to immediately go for a tour of the island and stay awake until the normal bedtime arrived. We did this in a dazed “zombi-like” state but it worked and we recovered in quick order. My work in Guam consisted of teaching a science workshop
for elementary teachers of Guam schools. I had good facilities, good students,
and good climate. As a territory of the U.S., Guamanians spoke good English so
language was not a problem. The island is about 50 miles long and about 10 miles
wide. It was occupied by the Japanese during World War II and was liberated by
the Americans in 1945. Its latitude is about 15 degrees North so it is tropical
and under the influence of the trade wind belt, constantly blowing from the
northeast. There were a few good beaches for swimming and snorkeling.
Tom and David both learned to scuba dive while they were there. There were some
dangerous rip tides on the east side of the island so caution was necessary. The city of Agana is the capital city and was a bustling
place even then. It has grown larger and has many good tourist hotels now, I
understand. We had the good fortune of having the use of a car while there so
could shop and sightsee at will. David was driving then and on one occasion was
diverted by a pretty, bikini-clad girl on the sidewalk. As a consequence, he
bumped the car ahead of him and suffered some damage to our car – a leaky
radiator and some other damage. It cost a few hundred dollars to repair and
undoubtedly was a learning experience for David. One of the students in my class painted a watercolor
painting of a portion of the ocean beach near our home and presented the
painting to us when we left. We treasure this memento of our summer in Guam. In the summer of 1967, during our sojourn in Guam, my Dad
died in Wisconsin. Brother Charles called me in Guam and we decided I would not
fly back for the funeral because of the time and distance. I was midway through
the workshop at that time. While it was unavoidable, I regret not being able to
return home and to assist with the funeral arrangements, provide a measure of
comfort for my mother, and say my last goodbyes to my father. At the end of the six week workshop, David and I decided to
go to Japan for a few days. Dorothee, Tom, Edith, and Howard arranged to go to
Saipan, a nearby island for a vacation. They were lucky in finding a family that
would put them up for a short time and they enjoyed making new friends and
seeing family life in Saipan. They made the trip to Saipan in a small cargo
freighter and enjoyed the new experience. David and I flew to Tokyo where we stayed in a Japanese
style hotel. We did some sightseeing and enjoyed meeting many Japanese who were
very interested in us because they wanted to practice their rudimentary English.
We took a trip to Osaka by the “bullet train” which travels more than 100
miles per hour across its route. On our return, we stopped at Mount Fuji, where
we made a climb of the volcanic peak during the night, starting at about 9pm
There were many Japanese tourists making the climb also. The night was cool and
David wasn’t adequately dressed for cool weather. On seeing his shivering, one
of the Japanese dug in his knapsack and brought out a warm jacket for David’s
use. What hospitality! The exertion, the altitude, and the night climb brought on
a headache and stomach upset for me. After upchucking my dinner I felt better
and continued the climb. We were well above the stratus clouds and it was a
moonlit night so it was a beautiful sight. We arrived at the summit before
sunrise and found that there is a Shinto shrine at the top which is the
residence of several monks. It is their custom to proceed to the rim of the
crater in their robes just before sunrise, sit down, and exhort the sun to come
up. Amazingly, it does so every day with great regularity. On completing our visit to Japan, David and I flew to
Honolulu where we rejoined Dorothee and the other children, and heard about
their interesting experiences in Saipan. Our summer experiences as a family were
remembered in slides and photos and we still look back at them to reminisce
occasionally. These experiences would not be complete without relating a
fishing trip that Dorothee and I had at the invitation of the Vern Hagens,
fellow faculty member at the University of Guam. The Hagens had a powerboat and
we took a short trip out to sea looking for tuna. To locate the fish, it was
customary to watch for circling birds who were feeding on small fish that were
being chased by the larger tuna. When such a flock was spotted, the powerboat
would take off at high speed for the area and put out its fishing poles.
Dorothee was handed one of the poles and in a short time she had a strike, and
with some effort pulled in a 75 pound tuna! What a surprise! It happened a few
minutes later as well, and we went back to shore the proud possessors of two
large tuna fish. We cleaned them and put them in the refrigerator (had to remove
all the trays to do it). We served fresh tuna to all the neighbors and friends
that night. Second Trip to Taiwan
– November, 1983 I was invited to give a talk at the First Annual Asian
Conference on Science Education in Taipei. I was teaching at Texas A & M in
College Station during the fall of 1983. I prepared my speech and had the
secretary in my office send it to the officials in Taipei. Unfortunately, I
failed to specify that it should be sent AIR MAIL, and consequently it went by
surface mail which took two months. I could not understand the repeated requests
from Taipei for a copy of my talk, as it was to be printed along with others
before the date of the conference in November. At any rate, Dorothee and I
arrived in Taipei and stayed at the Ambassador Hotel. The meetings were held on
the main campus of the National Taiwan Normal University, nearby. About 200 participants from several Asian countries and
from the U.S. attended the conference. At least two science educators, friends
of mine from the University of Iowa, were there on their first trip to Taiwan.
As a diversion, the entire group was flown to Hualein on the east coast and from
there transported by bus along the cross-island highway to Taroko Gorge, a
magnificent natural feature about 1000 feet deep. The entire trip was
interesting and much enjoyed. Third trip to Taiwan
– August, 1984 Arrangements were made for a longer stay in Taiwan in the
academic year of 1984-85, when I was appointed to a Special Chair in the Physics
Department of National Taiwan Normal University in Taipei. My duties were to
teach a course on methods of teaching science and a course on evaluating student
performance in science classes. My students were all seniors at the university
and were planning to teach physics in the Taiwan schools the following year.
They wrote and read English quite well, but were a bit reluctant to speak it,
because of lack of prior opportunities. I prepared for classes by photocopying
chapters from my methods book and having them read the materials before class.
Then we had a “discussion”, such as it was, and I showed many demonstrations
that I customarily used in my classes in the U.S. The system worked well and the
students did good work. We lived in a university apartment at the main campus. It
had three bedrooms, a small kitchen, a bathroom, and a small balcony. The
apartment was on the second floor of the building. John Cappo, our step grandson
from New York, accompanied us on the trip so we were glad for a third bedroom.
John enrolled in Mandarin classes at the university and did amazingly well. He
bought a motorcycle, a common form of transportation in the city, and soon knew
enough Chinese so he could order our food, buy our propane tanks for the
kitchen, and give directions to the taxi drivers. The location of the physics department was about a half
mile from our residence at the Roosevelt Road Campus. I customarily walked the
distance morning and night and enjoyed the hustle and bustle of the busy city
streets, vendors, shops, and traffic. The latter was of every description –
cars, taxis, trucks (three and four wheeled), motorcycles, bicycles, buses, and
horse drawn carts. One day in walking home from my office, I saw a Chinese lady
with her little boy, about 2 years old, slowly climbing the steps of the
overpass to get across the busy street. At each step, she would say to her son
“one”, “two”, “three”, “four”, etc. At the top of the stairs, I
congratulated her on starting to teach her son English at such an early age. She
said, “Oh, we don’t live here. My husband is a missionary and we live in
Cheyenne, Wyoming. We’re here to learn Chinese”! Another American couple, Hugh McCalley and his wife, lived
near us and he taught economics at National Taiwan University, the sister
university, which was larger than NTNU, and which was in the same vicinity. We
had many restaurant meals together and enjoyed their company. On Halloween
Dorothee decided to have a party for several friends at our apartment, Halloween
is an unfamiliar holiday to the Chinese, so I “boned” up on its origins so I
could explain it to our guests. Dorothee provided face masks for each guest and
we had a good time with parlor games, taking pictures, etc. and finishing with
refreshments. In addition to my duties in the physics department, my friend,
Ouyang, arranged several speaking engagements for me at schools around the
island. He usually served as my translator. I would slowly and carefully say a
few words in English relating to the topic, and then Ouyang would translate. His
translation would go on and on, so that I was never sure whether he was
embellishing my speech or whether it really took that many words to explain the
concepts in Chinese! We again had an opportunity to travel around the entire
island by bus at the end of the year, as the students were provided their
traditional orientation trip in preparation for next year’s teaching. Students
are guaranteed a job when they complete their studies but are required to teach
at least two years after graduation from college. John went with us on the trip,
all paid for by the school. Unfortunately, he became ill and didn’t enjoy the
trip as much as he might have. The students were very solicitous of him and did
everything they could to cure his ailment. At one point he went to a doctor who
gave him a shot. As he told it afterward, the shot syringe looked as if it was
meant for a horse! There was a small shop on the campus where I taught and I
enjoyed going there for coffee and refreshments in the middle of the morning. I
talked them into making a special cup of coffee for me in a small vacuum type
coffee maker. It made good coffee, and that together with some delicious date or
fig cakes made a very satisfying mid-morning break. I learned of a Kiwanis Club at the China Hotel shortly
after arriving. I decided to attend their Thursday evening meetings and took
John with me. It was an English speaking club and they had several good
programs. The members especially enjoyed John, who never failed to appear in a
coat and tie, well dressed, smiling and congenial. He had learned enough Chinese
so that he was able to converse with them a bit, and they were very impressed
with my “grandson”. In contrast to the common appearance of other unkempt
and raged (the adolescent style, I guess), John made a very good impression, and
Dorothee and I were proud of him. During our year in Taipei, we learned that our house renter
in Greeley had moved out. Jim Dech, who was watching over the house for us
called us and told us the news. It seemed best that Dorothee go back to Greeley
during the Christmas break and get a new renter for the house. Since I was
working on revising our methods textbook for its fifth edition, I thought this
would be a good opportunity for me to go to Seattle and work in the University
of Washington library. So we went separate ways and rejoined in Seattle about
two weeks later as we were planning to return to Taiwan for the second semester. I had an invitation from Sung Jae Pak, a former doctoral
student of mine from Korea, to come to Seoul and give a talk to several members
of the Seoul University faculty. So we obtained tickets for Seoul and traveled
there on our way back to Taiwan. We stayed at a fine hotel, the Hyatt Regency,
and spent a few days traveling to other parts of South Korea. It was cold in
January but we were comfortable. A visit to Pak’s residence was a pleasure as
we met his parents who lived with him and had a fine traditional Korean meal at
his home. Many homes are heated by a large coal furnace in the living quarters
which vents heat under the floors of the house. Consequently the floors are
always comfortable – where everyone sits, eats, and sleeps. Very little
furniture in the rooms. The air in the room seemed chilly – especially the
higher one stood up! The second semester in Taipei was uneventful, except for
several more trips, speeches, and good food. I finished my courses on schedule
and proceeded to write my final report of the year’s activities. I had access
to an Apple computer so the task was easy. I had copies of all my talks so I
included those. I finished up all my work by mid-July so began to wonder whether
I might apply to return to the U.S. a month early. My contract really was to run
until September. This would give me time to apply for a teaching position in the
U.S. Accomplishing this from the distance of Taiwan was not practical and
unsuccessful. So we returned to the U.S. in early August and found
everything satisfactory at our house. But I did not succeed in getting a
teaching job for 1985-86. However, I was collecting PERA and Social Security so
had enough to live on. It was a good year to travel, so we purchased airline
tickets from Eastern Airlines called “Get up and Go”, with which we could
fly every week if we desired, for one total pre-paid price. In the spring of 1986, I applied for the position of
director of the newly formed Math and Science Teaching Center at UNC. After
interviews and other rigamarole, I was informed that I “did not qualify for
the position”. I asked for reasons why I did not qualify, and was told by the
dean of Arts and Sciences that such information was not available. This incensed
Dorothee to the point where she took direct action. She confronted the vice
president and the president of the university and finally got the V.P. to agree
to a meeting with me, the affirmative action officer, and Dorothee. When we
arrived at his office, he told me that there was nothing he could do – that
this was a dean’s decision. But he said, “If you will come back at 5:00 P.M.
tomorrow, I will have a letter for you”. I assumed it would be an explanation
of why I did not qualify. Instead, it was a letter of re-employment at the
University! Because I had already signed a contract to teach at the University
of Northern Iowa for the 1986-87 school year, the offer was extended to the fall
of 1987. So it was that I got my job at the university back after a four year
hiatus, at the same salary with benefits and other status. I was the only
faculty member of the group of 47 that lost their jobs in 1983, to ever get my
job back! Trip to Saudi Arabia
– Spring 1989 During the twenty year period in which our Science
Education Department at UNC flourished, we had a large number of foreign
students who worked on masters and doctoral degrees. Among these were twelve
students from Saudi Arabia who arrived over a ten year period, completed their
work, and returned to their country to assume positions in education at college
and university levels. In the spring of 1989, I was invited by one of these
former students who now held a prominent position in the Ministry of Education
in Saudi Arabia, to give a talk on “Trends in Physics Teaching in the U.S.”
Because another former student, Roy Unruh, from the University of Northern Iowa,
had developed some materials for IBM to be used in computer instruction, I
obtained some disks from him and took them with me to show to the Saudis. I
worked up a speech of about 40 minutes on physics teaching trends, and flew to
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. I was met by one or two of my former students and escorted
to a plush hotel, I think the Hyatt, where I met another speaker for the
seminar, a mathematics educator from Scotland. He and I became good friends and
enjoyed the amenities provided by the Hyatt Hotel during our stay. One which I
remember was the food spread out on a buffet table in the lobby, which was open
and stocked 24 hours a day. So any time during the day or night, we were able to
help ourselves to fruit, hot and cold food, drinks, and desserts. This was
available for all meals and there was no standard sit-down restaurant at which
one could order from a menu. Needless to say, we indulged freely. My talk went well and was well received. The participants,
who were university teachers from every city in Saudi Arabia as well as several
adjoining countries in the Persian Gulf area, were also interested in the IBM
materials I had to show. The mathematics educator gave an interesting talk which
seemed to harmonize quite well with the philosophy of teaching that I had
outlined. During my stay, I was invited to dinner at one of my former
student’s home. My new Scottish friend was also invited, since he had no other
contacts in Riyadh, and he accepted gratefully. We arrived for a roast lamb
dinner which was prepared by several of the wives of the students and which was
delicious. Interestingly, we never were introduced to any of the women, because
of the customs of the culture, but I was aware that they existed at dinner
time as a lady’s hand protruded through a partially open door as she passed
the enormous platter of whole roast lamb through it to be taken to the table. I
say “table” but in fact it was a beautiful table cloth spread upon the floor
with cushions all about for people to sit cross-legged while they ate. Table
service was provided for the “foreigners” but the Saudis ate with their
hands. Drinks were large bottles of coca-cola placed strategically at each
place. After dinner, we toured the palatial home of one of the
former students, an example of luxury at its finest, enabled of course by the
enormous quantity of oil money that was flowing into the country at that time. On another day, the two “westerners” were shown King
Faisal University in Riyadh, a brand new institution, built from “sand” up
within the past five years. It was complete with laboratories, classrooms,
administrative buildings, dormitories, and every needed facility for a large,
modern university. Two of my former students taught in the Department of
Curriculum and Instruction and I was asked to give a short talk to the faculty
of that department. Another former student conducted me on a tour of Riyadh,
particularly to the shopping center. His purpose was to show me a modern
shopping mall. It consisted of three levels – not physical structures, but in
terms of price levels and elaborate-ness. The first was a series of stalls of
the typical Middle East market type. The second was comparable to our common,
everyday shopping malls in the U.S. The third was a “super-mall” with high
priced shops and boutiques. The shoppers consisted mostly of women dressed in
their traditional “chadors”, or long black robes with veiled head-wear.
Because the women are not to associate with men outside their own family, as I
walked with my friend down the long corridors, a woman would see me some
distance away and immediately cover her entire face with the veil, peering
through a tiny slit for her eyes. During my short stay in Saudi Arabia, I was able to see all
twelve of my former students, most of them at the dinner described earlier, but
also during my seminar in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. On my
flight home, we made a stop in Jeddah, on the west coast of Saudi Arabia,
located on the Red Sea. While sitting in the airport waiting for my next flight,
I noticed a familiar figure sitting across from me. It was another of my
students, who had traveled to Bangkok and was on his way back to Riyadh. We
talked briefly and recalled events in Greeley while he was a student there. So
it was that I got to see all of my former students who had graduated from our
science education program at UNC. My return to the states was uneventful. I stopped in New
York to see Bob and Edie for one night, and showed off my checkered headpiece
and headband that was given to me by Salim Kurnas, my former student. The trip
was a total pleasure and I hope to have the opportunity to travel back to Saudi
Arabia sometime in the future. Fifth trip to Taiwan
– February 1994 During the summer of 1993, I taught for three weeks in
Cedar Falls, Iowa, at the University of Northern Iowa. My students were all
teachers from Taiwan who were working on a masters degree in science education.
My course was Educational Research Methods. At that time, I was invited to come
to Taiwan in February, 1994, to teach a course on Methods of Middle School
Science Teaching. Dorothee went with me and we had an enjoyable time. We taught
at a school in the southern part of the island where the temperature was quite
mild, even in February. The hotel we lived in was light and airy and very
comfortable. We had a chance to visit several parks on the southern coast of
Taiwan. Twenty-four students attended this class and we all had an enjoyable
time. At the conclusion of our course, we traveled to Bangkok,
Thailand for two days where we were entertained by two former students, and met
another former student, Therachai, of the early ‘60’s who is now in a high
level position in the Ministry of Education. Five of us had dinner together at a
nice restaurant. We visited several temples and historic sites in Bangokok. We
were asked if we wanted to go to a vegetable market, using the water taxi that
plied the river. We agreed and went to the dock. While there we met two
policemen who were friendly and engaged in conversation. A powerboat came down
the river and the policemen waved to the driver, a friend of theirs. He stopped
at the dock and asked if we wanted a ride. Dorothee, our host, and I agreed with
reluctance but told the driver to go slow as we didn’t want to bounce and slam
up the river at high speed. We took off up the river and soon were tearing along at
about 30 miles an hour, it seemed. We made waves and even nearly upset a small
fishing boat nearby. The fisherman was disgusted and threw a pail of water at
us. On leaving Bangkok, we flew to Tokyo, but were delayed 5
hours because of a snowstorm in Japan. But we then flew to Honolulu and onward
to Maui, where we spent two days. The weather was rainy but mild. We returned to
Greeley safely and found everything in good order. Sixth Trip to Taiwan
– February, 1995 In the summer of 1994, I spent three weeks in Cedar Falls,
Iowa, teaching a course on “Trends in Science Education” to Taiwan students
who were in the masters degree program in science education. Upon completion of
that course, I was asked by Drs. Ouyang and McCalley if I would be interested in
teaching in Taiwan in February, 1995 to several of the group who were interested
in going beyond the masters degree. The course would be “Teaching Science to
Gifted and Talented Students”. I of course accepted with pleasure and on
January 28, Dorothee and I embarked on the trip across the Pacific. We stopped
three nights in Honolulu and enjoyed swimming on Waikiki beach two days. Another
day we took the 80 cent round island bus trip and enjoyed the scenery. It was a
day when the surf on the north coast was high and wild. Several of the beaches
were closed because of the danger, but the sights were spectacular. We met four Iowa persons in Taipei, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Unruh,
Dave McCalley, and Virginia Hash, who were also there to teach short course
during the lunar New Year vacation period. We were taken to the Maple Village
Hotel about 8 miles from Taipei, where we taught our classes, had our food and
lodging and enjoyed beautiful resort surroundings. The two weeks passed swiftly and we all had an enjoyable
time. The hotel even prepared western style breakfasts for us every morning. On
one day we took a bus trip to the northeast coast of Taiwan where we enjoyed
good scenery, fresh sea food, and good company. After the course was over,
Dorothee and I flew from Taipei to San Francisco, then to Seattle, where we had
short visits with Tom and Dave’s families, before returning to Colorado. A
pleasant event occurred in which Dr. Ouyang invited us back for a final course
in February of 1996. This will complete the series and the program will come to
an end in the summer of 1996. Consulting in
Cairo, Egypt – April, 1994 In February, 1994, I was asked by the Educational
Development Center in Washington, D.C. whether I would be interested in going to
Cairo for two months to work on developing curriculum for elementary schools in
Egypt. I decided that I really wasn’t qualified to work on curriculums in any
areas besides science so I declined the invitation. At that point, EDC clarified
for me that I would be assisting in writing teachers’ guides only, and since I
had experience in writing such guides, I reconsidered and agreed to go to Cairo.
Dorothee, of course, was delighted at my change of mind. She is ready to travel
anywhere at any time! On April 10, Dorothee and I flew to London and thence to
Cairo. We had been supplied with economy class tickets, but when we arrived in
Denver to embark on the first leg of our flight, we were informed that the
flight was oversold - and would we mind being upgraded to first class! We of
course didn’t mind the idea at all, so had the luxury of flying in first class
accommodations from Denver to Gatwick airport in London, England. This is a nine
hour flight so we appreciated the upgrade. From London to Cairo, a 4 hour
flight, we flew on Egypt Air Lines in regular economy seats. An interesting feature in our seats was a small TV screen
on which the location and progress of our flight across the country and the
ocean was constantly displayed in the form of a small image of ta plane and the
land masses or oceans over which we were traveling. Thus we were able to keep
track of our progress and estimate our time of arrival. We landed at Gatwick
Airport on schedule and spent a night in a hotel at the Heathrow Airport, where
we would emplane for Cairo the next day. Our arrival in Cairo took place on schedule – about 8:30
P.M. We were met there by Dr. Atkinson, the Chief of Party for our group of
consultants. He with his cab driver took us to the Nile Hilton Hotel where we
were to be lodged for the two month period. This luxury hotel is situated on the
east bank of the Nile River in downtown Cairo, a beautiful location with a
perfect view of the Nile activity during the day and night. We were situated on
the 7th floor of the hotel. My work for the Curriculum Center began the very next day.
A short ride on the subway, a short walk to the office, and we were in business.
Our task, we were informed by Dr. Atkinson, was not to write a teacher’s
guides but to assist the staff of the curriculum center in doing so – thus to
give them an investment of their own efforts in the work. Our work week was six
days – Saturday through Thursday. Friday was a regular day off according to
Islamic custom. Our work day was from 9 to 3:30. It turned out that there were
several official holidays during the period, so it wasn’t so strenuous after
all. I met several officials and staff members. Two
regular staff were non-Egyptians – one a Briton who was an experienced
publisher, and the other an American lady with computer skills. They had long
term contracts and had been in Cairo a couple of years. One other short term
consultant was there when I arrived, but soon after, several others arrived. All
in all, six consultants appeared during the two month period, with somewhat
overlapping assignments. So we got to enjoy each other’s company and had many
social gatherings and sightseeing trips. My thrust to get things started, was to have meetings with
small groups of subject matter persons who were responsible for ultimately
writing the teacher’s guides that we planned. There were science, mathematics,
social studies, Arabic language, religion, agriculture, home economics, and
industrial arts. During the course of 8 weeks, I had 23 meetings with these
groups. I had brought with me several books for various grade levels
representing teacher’s guides in science, mathematics and social studies.
These proved to be well received by the curriculum staff and they were anxious
to make photocopies of relevant pages for examples of American teacher’s
guides. I permitted them to do so because they were not to be used intact but
only for ideas. A problem soon became apparent that made the planning
difficult. It was that the textbooks for the respective grade levels and
subjects to be used the next school year were delayed by about two months. So it
was that we never did see any text materials for which the teachers’ guides
were to be written. It seemed ludicrous that this could happen, but we made do
by concentrating on the preliminary materials that would go into each
teachers guide and then outline as best we could the content that should be
covered and ideas for teaching it. A problem that frequently occurred was the superceding of
planned meetings with groups by unannounced meetings called by the director of
the Center. This of course would cancel our meetings and delay our discussions.
But of course the director was the boss. The general efficiency of the bureaucracy in the Center was
very low. All decisions had to be counter-approved by the director in every
detail and this slowed down work processes. In addition, each staff member was
intimidated by the director and was unwilling to make a decision on his own. So
a lot of time seemed to be wasted. All the consultants sensed this problem but took a relaxed
point of view. I think the problem was mentioned in the final reports written by
the consultants, however. One of the consultants was Ernie (Buck) Burkman, a former
student of mine from the University of Michigan. I was on his doctoral committee
at Michigan shortly after I completed my own doctoral degree. He and His wife
Nancy were good company and Dorothee and Nancy did a lot of sightseeing
together. Because of the fact that we were working six days a week, we didn’t
have much time for sightseeing, but did manage to see the Pyramids, the Egyptian
Museum, and a necropolis near Cairo where several ancient relics had been found
and several graves of the Pharaohs had been located. One humorous incident occurred to Dorothee and me while
staying in the Nile Hilton Hotel. We had made it a practice to walk a block or
two to a swimming pool each afternoon to relax and cool off. One day we returned
to our room, hung our swimming suits on the balcony chair to dry, and put on
lounging clothes for the evening. We both went out onto the balcony to enjoy the
cool evening breeze, and I closed the sliding door behind me. Before Dorothee
could say “Don’t close that!”, the door had already locked and we
were stranded on the balcony outside our room – seven floors above the ground. What to do now? Dorothee is very resourceful so she took my
white undershorts which were drying, looked around the edge of the balcony at
the adjoining room and learned that a lady was reading near her balcony door.
The curtains were partly open. Dorothee called but the lady did not hear. So
Dorothee threw my white undershorts past the open drapes of the adjoining room,
hoping the lady would see them fly by. Fortunately, she did and peered
cautiously out her door, thinking perhaps a wounded pigeon had landed! So
Dorothee got her attention and asked the lady to call security to let us back
into our room. It took about fifteen minutes to rescue us. What would we have
done if there had been no one in the rooms on either side of us? Dorothee made friends of several Egyptian ladies who
invited her to luncheons, to the country club, etc. In return Dorothee showed
some of her “science experiments” to the children of these ladies, which
they appreciated. At one of the early swimming sessions, Dorothee discovered
a young boy about ten years old at the pool who seemed to be under constant
close guard by several brawny and armed men who didn’t let him out of
their sight. She learned that he was a Saudi prince on vacation in Cairo for two
months. Being Dorothee, this fact intrigued her and she resolved to get to know
the prince. She did it by doing some of her “experiments” at poolside for
several other children, and soon the prince became part of the group. Of course
Dorothee had to explain to the guards that she was not about to abduct the
prince or cause him any harm. The science lessons became a regular part of the
pool activities for a month or so. She found the prince was somewhat over
protected and showed the results of that by being a bit reluctant to join
in with the other children in doing some of the science tricks. But he soon
opened up and had fun with the rest of them – in fact asked her to come back
next day. Next to the Nile Hilton Hotel was the Egyptian Museum which
Dorothee and I visited twice. Most interesting to me was the room in which were
kept mummies dating back in time 4500 years. They were kept in individual small
glass containers in which there were a thermometer and a hygrometer to keep tabs
on the temperature and relative humidity needed for best preservation. In most
cases the faces were exposed and in some cases arms and torsos. It was
remarkable to gaze upon once living human beings from more than four millennia
in antiquity. We were careful to watch the food we ate and the water we
drank to avoid getting sick. Most of our meals were taken in the hotel dining
room and we sampled just about every item on their extensive menu by the end of
our stay. All of the other consultants and their wives were a bit more
adventurous in eating at a number of Egyptian restaurants. Unfortunately, they
all at one time or another came down with stomach distress. Dorothee and I
avoided any digestive problems. Our stay in Cairo ended on June 1st, 1994 and we flew back
to the States non-stop to New York. There we spent one night with Bob and Edie
before returning to Denver. Our adventure was all positive and we look back on
the experience with pleasure, especially because we met a group of nice people
and have new friends. The Burkman’s visited us briefly in Colorado in the
summer of 1994 and are planning to return to Colorado again soon. Living in
Tallahassee in the summer is not too pleasant so they camp in Colorado
frequently at that time of year. My pay for the two months was $11,500 which was just enough
to buy a small Dodge pickup truck to replace our old International, which I sold
to Howard. This was the most painless purchase I ever made, as I never did see
the check (it came when I was in Iowa ) and it went directly into the pockets of
the Dodge dealer in Greeley. This concludes my narrative of special assignments. This is
not to say that all such activities are at an end but I shall put this document
in booklet form and distribute it to Dave, Tom Edie, Howard, and Grandma
Trowbridge. The End Leslie Trowbridge April 1995
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