Non-Yan’an 1996

Reflections 2024

I hadn’t thought about it at the time, but this was the first May Term trip.  The shift from January to May changed a number of things.

First May Term

 

 

 

 

In some ways, it got harder to fill after 1995, when IWU overhauled its curriculum, requiring only 32 classes, and eliminating J-term.  Student protests, however, led to a voluntary May Term, and the university put one of its most powerful leaders, Mona Gardner, in charge of it.  Despite my fears that the May term would wither, partly because students could otherwise work that month, and partly because government funding got cut off, May term prospered, and as evidenced by the material in the blog, I enjoyed the opportunity to travel in May, with students, and after those trips without them.  However, since class was no longer required for faculty or students.  That meant a harder sell to attract students and some maneuvering to get to lead one of the trips, since it meant faculty taught fewer courses during the regular year.  For me, I sometimes combined sections of classes to get the six, sometimes went as a co-leader, sometimes  (to the annoyance of the administration), led a trip without it being part of my teaching responsibilities–i.e., taught for free.  On occasion, I even (for the first JTerm) wound up paying for the trip myself.

I had also been a strong advocate for having two faculty on those trips, a cause abetted when an English professor had an accident and had no backup.  That came to pass with May Term.  I was consequently able to travel with Zhenhu Jin, Jerry Olson, Dave Willis, Jin Park, Tim Query, Ruth Ann Friedberg, Bill Walsh, Jim Sikora, and Ella Pana.

The co-leader for this trip was easy: Zhenhu Jin, a finance professor at IWU, who was born in Shanghai. We spent several years on trips to Asia and SE Asia.  In 1997, I was on sabbatical, and my adventures are detailed elsewhere.

Nanking on the steps of the Sun Memorial

Obviously, May was warmer.  That meant no pictures without vendors on the Great Wall.  With Dr. Jin aboard, we changed the itinerary a little, looking at Shanghai, Nanking, North China (Xi’an and Yan’an), and Korea. One of our interesting site visits was a traditional Chinese hospital, where some of us sought acupuncture.  And I got to visit Tuan and his wife, which was a treat for me.  And our national guide, once

 

 

 

again, was Mr. Li.  We also had (the only time) an alum who expressed interest and joined us.

The Korean part of the trip was memorable because one of our students found (most) of us lodging in a yogwan. A rich student lodged himself at a Western hotel.  Ours was authentically, Korean, with mats on the floor and condom machines.  It was during the NBA finals, and I watched as Michael Jordan soared with one of his dunks, starting at the free throw line, and the Taiwanese announcer went, “Wow.”  Perhaps there was no other word to describe it, and certainly not one in Chinese.

And this was the group that had all the gun lighters confiscated!

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