MCF: What a life

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Letter from President George Bush

THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON

August 30, 1990

Dear Mrs. Fleming: Barbara and I are delighted to send best wishes as you celebrate your 80th birthday. What a remarkable life you1ve led — great in experiences and great in accomplishments! Your strong commitment to quality education has inspired your students to strive for excellence so that, by working hard and by displaying individuai initiative, they too can make a difference in thè world. Yours has been a noble endeavor spanning nearly six decades, and I congratulate you on a job well done. We join your family, colleagues and friends in wishing you a wonderful celebration, surrounded by thè warmth of happy memories and secure in thè knowledge that you have made this a better world. Sincerely,

Mrs. Mary Crist Fleming Lugano SWITZERLAND


MCF—WHAT A LIFE!

Eightieth-Birthday Tribute With Addendum for Her Ninetieth Birthday

EDITED BY

LYNN FLEMING AESCHLIMAN CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA 1990

LUGANO, SWITZERLAND

2000


I am only one; but I am one I cannot do everything; but I can do something; What I can do I ought to do, and what I ought to do, by thè Grace of God I will do.” Caroline Frames Leavitt September 5, 1897 Mt. Desert, Maine (As quoted on thè front page of her Bible)


Table of Contents INTRODUCTION: 1 Editor With Gratitude................................... 1 CHILDHOOD: 3 Mary Crist Fleming Born a Virgin............... 4 Roswell Gilpatric Salute to a Favorite Cousin..........................................9 Editor College Girl’s Escapades....................9 THE 1930s: 11 Mary Crist Fleming MCF’s Anecdotage: Beginning .............................................. 12 Mary Crist Fleming No Soap in thè Soviet.............................................. 14 Holly Hanson Coors The Desert Song .... 25 W.J.C.—The Mike Senior Luncheon at thè Wisteria..........................................27 Ford News Into Yugoslavia: Six School Girls in a Ford......................28 Peggy Unger Henrys She Was Our Passport Everywhere...............................30 Lillian McFetridge Wilson We Did It thè Way thè “Grand Tour” Should Be Done ... 31 Holly Hanson Coors America! America! . . 33 Mary Crist Fleming Fording Europe.........35 THE 1940s: 45 LIFE Magazine Life Goes to a Free French Show................................... 46 Betsy Bacon Newell Travels Down Frog Hollow Lane................................... 51 Editor Keep Order....................................... 55 THE 1950s: 57 Use Nelson Should I Give It Up?............... 62 Lynn Fleming Aeschliman My Mother Has a Phobia about Trains......................62 Luise Rainer Knittel One Mistake I Did Make.............................................. 63 Patti Richards Cosgrave She Did Save Me from an Overly Attentive Counselor . . 64 Ann Phelan McCloskey Best Thing She Did Was Push Me Out of thè Nest ... 65 Mary Crist Fleming How to Start a School.................................................... 65 Jean Gage She Was Welcome to Our Son for a Year.................................................. 70 John Gage Turning Point in My Life .... 70 Marc Schreiber Never a Dull Moment ... 72 Robert Sears Some Memories of Locamo Times......................................... 72 Jacquard Rothschild General to thè Rescue................................................ 73

Jim Durham How Many Lives Have You Swept Into?............................ 74 Adele Bradbury Wells Recollections of Times Past............................................75 Sybil Dowst Madame’s Presence................. 77 Marco Hauert Tme Confessions of a Delightfully Mad and Equally Charming Swiss Holiday Counselor . . 78 THE 1960s: 85 Mary Crist Fleming The Inauguration of Villa Monticello....................................... 89 Eleanor Gurewitsch A Dream of a School................................................90 Leo and Anne Van Brussel Instant Friendship Became Something Like Family Love..................................... 90 James Botkin Tribute to Mrs. Fleming ... 91 Marian Courtney YOU were VOGUE PERSONIFIED...................... 91 Raymond Robbins A Veritable Grande Dame..........................................91 Lenita Robbins If You Can Walk with Kings..................................... 92 Bayard Sheldon After All, thè Relationship Between a Customer and Her Banker Is Supposed to Be Confidential............. 96 Ian David Mellon Montagnola Nights ... 97 Peter Waller We All Suddenly Became Aware of a Presence................................ 99 Gray Mattem Ode on thè Occasion of thè Celebration of thè Eightieth Natal Day of Mary Crist Fleming . . . 100 Pat Lytel I Was in thè Hands of an Expert............................................101 TIME Magazine The Breather Year .... 102 Cindy Crabtree and Marilee Telfer Luttig Excerpts from Student Letters............. 103 Marco Grassi An Ever-Changing “Salon” ................................................. 104 Editor Overheard....................................... 104 Wally Bacon Well-Timed Shake of Her Multibangled Wrist........................ 105 John and Michele Watson Dumb-Struck As We See Where She Has Led Us . . 106 Mary Crist Fleming Wouldrit It Be Wonderful If One Could Take Those 700 Chateaux.............................107 Stanley and Mary Anne Haas But, Gentlemen, I Dorit Know Much About Business.......................... 110 John Amis If and When I Die....................110


Robert Hixon Giove You Told Me You Were a Survivor.............................Ili True Davis All Round Wonderful Gal! . . Ili John and Mimi Summerskill Classy Place—Classy Lady.................. 112 Gerhard Schwarzacher The Craziest Task I Ever Did.............................................. 113 Sarah di Lenardo Dictated from Planes, Taxis, Cars, or from under thè Hairdryer...............................113 Nigel Blackwell Birthday Greetings to a Great Originai.................................114 Cornelia Field, Virginia Hutchinson, Ann Dodge, Tom Powell, and Peter Graham Belin Excerpts from Parent and Student Letters.................... 114 THE 1970s: 117 Tom Roberts She’s a Magician....................118 Margaret Kate Natsui Letter from an Alumna..................................... 119 Giorgio Guglielmetti Una Persona Come Lei................................................ 120 Christopher Lynn Thank God You Were Not Born a Man..................120 Jack Cook High Priestess...........................121 Gordon Heyd Hired by Mail......................123 MacRae Ross Entre Nous, Dear................124 Kate and Fernando Gonzalez MCF: A Few Personal Glimpses over 18 Short Years........................................125 Mary Crist Fleming “... and Puppy Dogs’ Tails”..................126 Fred Licht Lightning Struck and I Suddenly Felt Like Tamino................129 Robert Gordon That Rare Combination of Qualities......................................... 132 Andy Rose She Is Always in Serene Command................................... 132 Janet Rose Black Chiffon Nightgown . . 132 Ewan Mirylees Caviar.................................133 Hope Stevens “May I cali you Hope, my dear?”................................... 134 Peter Stevens You Changed Our Lives . . 135 Hans Figi, Mike Brus, Francys Yarbro Distejano, and Lucy Coco Excerpts from Student Letters....................................... 136 Roger Quinnan Opportune Time...........139 Roger and Jean Quinnan Care Package . . 140 Diana Dearth Black Sheath Dress and Black High Heels...................................140 John Stifler The Most Elegant Mini on thè Entire Isle................................... 141

THE 1980s: 143 Robert Betts The Grand Entrance...........145 George Salimbene MCF, A Very Special Person..................................... 146 Jack and Irene Bailey For Mary Crist Fleming...................... 146 Dan Howard That Strong Lady in thè Black Dress.................................147 Paul Zazzaro Take Control ofEvents . . . 148 John Stifler Mary Crist Fleming: A Lifetime in Education........................................... 149 Department of Education A Proclamation..................................... 157 Addison Brown She Had a Dream...........158 Nicole Leuderitz Excerpts from Student Letter..................................... 158 Radcliffe College Recognition Award .... 158 Hendrik Woods Your Gumption............... 159 Barbara and Wallace Graves Presides Par Excellence..........................159 Lyle and Sharon Rigg Whirling with Mrs. Fleming......................................... 160 Betty and Forrest Cranmer A Lady Who Operates with Flair and Style...........162 Felix Aprahamian What Might Have Been thè Setting for Strauss’s Capriccio .... 163 Mark Aeschliman Ruth Goes to thè Bootblack’s Room...or thè Ritz! .... 163 Kje Wynkoop and Hilda Sanchez Excerpts from Student and Parent Letters......................................... 164 Mary Crist Fleming MCF’s Anecdotage: Conclusion............................................. 165 TRIBUTES: 167 Friends Familiar Faces............................ 168 Sir Peter Smithers Sui Generis....................170 Christopher MacLehose Little Mother ... 170 Michael Aeschliman Beauty and Duty . . . 171 Akbar Khan Wisdom and Energy.........172 Melissa Maier The Pleasures of Table . . . 173 Michael Aeschliman Magnanimity...........174 Becky Cotton Christoffersen You Have Made a Difference........................................... 175 Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Another of My Mother’s Signatures................... 176 Daniella Case A Visit from Nonna.........176 Anna Crist Aeschliman Another Granddaughter’s View.........177 Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Remarkable Mother That She Is........ 178 Gai Fleming Case To My Dear Mother............................ 180 Editor In Conclusion.................................182 Frames Leavitt Crist “Our Father, as we come to thè parting”..................183

ADDENDUM 2000

184


INTRODUCTION

With Gratitude Mly mother doesn’t like to think back on thè past since she is always looking and going forward. “You can’t stand stili. You either go forward or backwards,” and backwards is a direction my mother rarely looks. Over thè years many people have suggested to my mother that she write her memoirs, but that is a task that hasn’t interested her, just as retiring and contemplating her past doesn’t in­ terest her. To get her to write something about her life for her 80th birthday, I asked our good friend John Amis to interview her while he was visiting our family at Capitignano over New Year’s. Thanks to John’s interviewing expertise we fmally got a tape of my mother reminiscing. Then brave Sarah di Lenardo, my mother’s secretary for over 20 years, tackled thè seeminglyendless challenge of transcribing it (and later thè retyping and thè retyping of thè revisions). With this as thè basis and my threats and pleas, mother fmally reworked thè interview for her final voice that we now have here in red italics and regular typeface. I was trying to keep this entire book a surprise, but finally had to teli my mother that there was a deadline for her text. I hope thè rest of thè wonderful material submitted by friends and associates from so many years has remained a surprise until thè presentation of this book in August. It is hard to keep any secret from my mother. As stories, memories, vignettes, tributes carne in, I would read them with great eagerness and delight. I was amazed how often I would fìnd myself smiling broadly, or bursting out in laughter, or welling up in tears. I found it very moving to read such poignant tributes to my mother. And I am sure she will be even more deeply moved. As I said, she doesn’t like to look back, since she throws herself with a passion into thè present and future. Hearing thè voices of so many friends from her past will surely be a heart-rending and moving experience. Her doctors, Dr. Uehlinger in Locamo in thè 50s and Dr. Pattarli in Lugano in thè 60s, both of whom have since died, warned her to take it easy since they thought she had a weak heart. She could not even get life insurance at thè time, if I recali correctly. How wrong they were, thank God. As so often doctors misjudge or underestimate thè power of thè spirit, they underestimated her will, her “burning heart,” her stamina and drive. So I hope all contained

herein will not crack her heart, but instead nourish and sustain it for thè decades ahead. I quote one of my mother’s favorite quotations, “To live in thè hearts of those we leave behind is not to die.” From reading all thè contributions that have come in for this book, I would say my mother will gratefully realize she is well on her way to this goal. I am very grateful to all her friends who responded so eloquently and enthusiastically to my requests for material for this book. Most everybody is extremely busy these days, so I doubly ap­ pariate thè time and effort expended by all who contributed to this volume. I know how grateful and touched my mother will be. I thank you “di cuore” on my own and my mother’s behalf. Whenever I would ask or doublé check with my mother, long-distance via Ma Bell, about specifìc dates in her life to try to date and place everything as chronologically accurate as possible, she would reply, “I’m so bad on dates, darling,” and then try to remember. So I apologize if one or two of thè dates herein are not absolutely accurate. From thè material I gathered I assumed “Fording Europe” took place between 1935 and 1939, but my mother thinks that it was only two years and she is not sure which. I know my mother has a hard time remembering dates, since I’m stili not absolute­ ly sure if I was born in 1945 or 1946. My passport says ‘45, yet she “thinks” ’46. As thè years pass, ITI opt for ’46. For years we all assumed she started The American School in Switzerland in 1955, but from thè faded dates on backs of old photographs and clues in letters, I would now say autumn of 1956 is thè founding date of TASIS. The fìrst summer pro­ gram in Switzerland took place in thè Vaud in 1955. But what’s in a date? Give or take a year. The passion and dedication with which my mother has lived thè present in her eighty years and plans on living her next several decades are what is remarkable. Almost everything here contained has been written specifically for this volume of tributes. However, I have taken thè liberty of including things written at an earlier date, by dose friends who live on in our hearts, by associates, and by TASIS alumni. Over thè past thirty years my mother has collected a large file of letters of gratitude from former students. I chose just a few to include as representative of thè results of

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INTRODUCTION

her efforts and of those of thè countless number of dedicated people who have worked with her. For a little extra flavoring and in my attempt to get at thè essence of MCF, I have also interspersed a selection of some of her favorite quotations, taken from her traveling black address book. Unfortunately, I could not always find thè source. Besides my gratitude to all who contributed material to make this volume what it is, I would like to express my gratitude to all who assisted in this endeavor in large and small ways—my mother, without whom of course this book wouldn’t exist; John Amis, thè catalyst; indefatigable, ever-cheery, ever-helpful Sarah di Lenardo, who kept an endless flow of my mother’s text and old photos from thè dusty bowels of De Nobili coming my way; Giorgio Guglielmetti, for his wonderful cartoons done for my mother’s seventieth birthday; Jane Miness, Jan Neumeister.

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and Sandra Johnson, who helped with thè typing here in thè States; Carrie Cox in thè TASIS New York office, who kept “faxed” messages flowing with humour, no matter what thè time of day or night; Sheila Gadd in thè TASIS Development Office in England, who kept photos coming my way; my wonderful editorial assistant and devoted husband Michael; and my patient children, Anna and Adrien, who put up with yet another of their mother’s projects. I here dedicate this book with deep love, gratitude, and esteem to my mother, Mary Crist Fleming, on her eightieth birthday, and to all women with “burning hearts.” Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia Editor


CHILDHOOD

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CHILDHOOD

Born a Virgin

Mary Crist, at 10 months, already trying to move mountains

Already thè business woman, “Any Mainer want to buy a clam?”

I was born a virgin in 1910 and stili am a virgin, since I was born on thè lOth of September and my birthday stili occurs every year on that same date. My mother had hoped and prayed for a beautiful child, but I was anything but beauti­ ful, then or now, with a very large nose that I ran after for thirty years before I could catch up and come to terms with it. My mother tried to compensate for my plainness by dressing me up in very frilly, fancy clothes rather than something simple and suitable. And I hated all of those outfits. The article I hated most was a large black velvet hat with a sky blue satin lining under thè brim, streamers down thè back and roses in thè front. I was eight years old and was supposed to wear that hat to Sunday School. Instead, I managed to hide it in thè hedge in

To grandmother’s house we go—but we are not allowed to drive, so horses and buggy pulì us to grandma’s on Mt. Desert

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front of thè church, hoping some dog would eat it while I was inside, but not even a dog could stomach it. The second thing that could have warped my character was not a thing, but an event. I sup­ pose I was about ten and was playing thè part of Hiawatha in thè school play. In Longfellow’s poem, Hiawatha is an Indian hero, and we had been spending several weeks studying AmericanIndian history, making costumes out of leather, practicing with turkey feathers stuck in beaded headbands, and shrilling war-whoops as we pranccd around thè classroom, all as a build-up

for thè big performance. As you may remember, in thè final climax of thè story Hiawatha sails away to thè land of thè hereafter, for which we were using a canoe on a small creek near thè school. My father, who was attending thè per­ formance, got nervous as thè final act approached, stepped down to thè shore, grabbed hold of thè canoe as I was about to leap into it, and said sternly, “Now, Mary, be careful when you get into thè boat.” My world crashed around me! I had been practicing for weeks thè grand gesture of a hero leaving thè world behind and sailing for thè land of thè hereafter—a gesture that I wanted to be remembered, as I was convinced I was destined to become a great actress! (Also, I hated thè name Mary and I was eager to drop it as soon as I could.) How I survived these two tragic episodes in my early youth, I do not know, anymore than I could understand, before my own children arrived, why my father spanked me vigorously when I returned home one day dripping wet from falling in a nearby pond. I was sure I would be embraced with a welcoming kiss for being alive and not drowned. Instead, I was immediately turned bottoms up and given a sound trouncing. Well deserved I now know, for being where I shouldn’t have been, but at thè time it was incomprehensible to me! My father was actually a wonderful man, a very wonderful man. My children all loved him very much. He was an extremely strong man physically and handsome in his own way, and yet in spite of his strength he was a tender, thoughtful man who always fought for thè under-dog. He defended people who were put upon and often endorsed loans from thè bank to poor people, many of which were not repaid. He also took very good care of my mother, always served her breakfast in bed and when we were on holiday he did all thè cooking, even cleaned thè house, and yet he was thè most masculine of men. My mother was more of a visionary, a great reader, and much more spiritual—a reai New Englander and quite puritanical. (The Leavitts were one of thè early English settlers to land in Massachusetts. They founded Hingham, Mass.) My father always protected her, so I remember him as a tough, but kind man. Thcre was a boys’ school in town where we had our girls’ school and thè boys in thè town were terrified of “Pop Crist”.


C H I L D H O O D

Whcn thcy tried to raid thè girls’ dormitories he would be on thè warpath, usually caught them and tossed them back over thè wall. I think a couple of them were sent to hospital as a result. My father was an Elder in thè Presbyterian Church and very supportive and active in thè church. I remember every Sunday his putting on his morning coat, tails and so forth, and being chief usher of thè church. I remember his even running thè light switches for my wedding

My mother wouldn’t marry my father until he dropped thè “H” out of his last name. Being of German descent from thè Rhineland, his name was spelt Christ, which my mother did not fancy, being a very devout woman. So my father dropped thè “H”. (And why they named me Mary I never really knew and was never pleased about, so I was very happy when young school friends started calling me “Cris”.) My father would teli thè story of compromise in marriage: thè wife wants to sleep on percale

“Grandma, are you sure?”

Baby Mary, center stage, relaxing with cousins and Leavitt

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grandparents.

My mother, Frances Leavitt Crist and...

because he had been doing it for a long time. The trouble was that when thè bride was about to go up thè aisle he pulled thè wrong switch and it became totally dark, and thè bride called back to him, “Better put thè lights on, Dad”. He was a wonderful man; a very exceptional person. As I said, my mother was more spiritual. She used to do all thè daily chapel talks at their school, although my father sometimes did thè morning exercises, too. They were short religious Services, which in those days were very much a tradition. We had hymns and a prayer to start off thè day; usually we saluted thè American flag, all of which things have now fallen into disrepute. I find this a shame, because it gave a kind of ritualistic beginning to thè day, which I think students need. In thè early years of TASIS we always had morning chapel. I hope it may return.

sheets, thè husband wants cotton, so they compromise and sleep on percale. My parents were both teachers. My father taught school for four years to earn enough money to attend Bucknell University. Then he got a job teaching math at South Jersey Institute. My mother attended Mount Holyoke and taught English at thè same school, which is where they met. I remember hearing that my mother had her initials C.F.L. (Caroline Frances Leavitt) on her china. My father proposed to her by reversing thè initials and painting F.L.C. (Frances Leavitt Crist) on her china. After they were married they taught at Swarthmore Preparatory School but soon wanted their independence and decided to start their own school, The Mary Lyon School. They started by renting thè Strath Haven Inn and later bought land across thè Street with three private

My father, Haldy Miller Crist

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CHILDHOOD

1911—Grandpa

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Horace Hall Leavitt and Grandma Mary Kelly Leavitt surrounded by their tour daughters, two sons, and spouses. Little Mary Crist is held in her father’s arms, while cousin Ros sits at their grandparents’ feet. Mary Kelly was of Irish extraction, while Horace Leavitt was of English descent. Grandpa's manner tended to be forbidding; grandma had a twinkle—both were strong minded.

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My mother and father in their courting days

The light shines

IN THE DARKNESS, A LIGHT THAT THE DARKNESS HAS NEVER PUT OUT. Gospel of St.John

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houses—Wildcliff, Hillcrest, and Seven Gables. My father built a large dormitory and thè huge stone Miller Crist Building for classrooms, library, study hall, offices, gymnasium and pool. Swarthmore College acquired thè whole property from thè Navy after thè war. My father built our summer home in Maine on Mt. Desert and to please my mother designed and constructed a very large stone fireplace. He bought huge stone blocks from a nearby quarry and towed them in a barge up a tide-water creek that ran alongside thè house. There was a small wooden bridge that thè tide would rush through twice a day as thè big tides carne and went. As he was unloading thè barge thè tide turned and started to rise rapidly, wedging thè barge under thè bridge and threatening to shatter it by thè force of thè water lifting thè barge. He began heaving thè huge stone blocks ever faster and faster to save thè bridge as a crowd gathered to watch thè outeome and to see who would win, my father or thè tide. Fortunately, my father did and to this day when pcople see thè beautiful fireplace they’re told thè legend of a strong man against tirne and nature.


CHILDHOOD

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Strath Haven Inn in

Whcn I was quite small and didn’t walk fast enough to suit him, he would pick me up by thè seat of my pants and go striding along propelling me forward with my two legs going through thè motion of walking but doing so in mid-air. He was a man who needed physical exercise. Among other things he built a golf course on thè school grounds, and used to play occasionally on it, but he would also be thè one who would mow thè greens and after school go out and run thè tractor to cut thè main fairways. He was a great wood chopper and a big fisherman. He didn’t like to eat fish, but loved to catch them and once caught a salmon so large he had to grill it on a bed spring for a picnic. He absolutely needed physical exertion as an outlet, a relaxation. He was powerful at tennis and played until he was well over sixty. For my father, a contract was a contract. During thè Second World War when many schools were confìscated to be used by thè military, many such schools just closed their doors even in thè middle of a school year. Not my father! Students were entrusted to him for thè academic year and that year was going to

be academically completed. So when thè U.S. Navy took over his school in January 1943, he moved all thè students to thè Barbizon Plaza in New York City. This incurred great financial loss. Tuition for thè second half year had run out by thè end of February since a New York hotel was a much more expensive base for a school than our own campus. As my father’s assistant, I well remember thè night when I returned to thè Barbizon Plaza with my little two-year-old daughter, having spent thè weekend with my husband, to find chaos reigning. The hotel was about to evict thè entire student body, faculty included, because thè week’s hotel bill had not been paid. Indeed not, for thè Navy had not paid for our school campus! And they did not pay for well over a year, but through thè good offices of my favorite cousin Roswell Gilpatric, a prominent New York lawyer, thè hotel had to recognize that thè U.S. Navy would eventually be a rcsponsible entity, and so extended credit to my father for thè balance of thè school year. Later, 1 also had help from another successful lawyer, in Washington. I had read about his winning a case for Mt. Vernon against thè U.S. Navy.

Swarthmore, Pa., where mother and dad started Mary Lyon School

MARY SCHOOL

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CHILDHOOD

Since my father had no money left and debts stili to pay, I contacted Arthur Phelan and asked him to take on our case to collect longoverdue payment for our school property from thè Navy. Needless to say, he succeeded and our life-long friendship started then.

books, china, orientai carpets, and thè grand piano.) As luck would have it a heavy blizzard started falling. The men at first refused to drive in such a storm but my pleas worked, and sitting in thè cab, beside thè driver of thè first lorry, we set off, reaching thè new house at midnight.

With students and my good friends Arthur Phelan (I.) and Jerry Wells (r.)

Mother Crist...

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and Pop Crist, “thè proudest father ever was of such a Daughter!”

All hugs and kisses for my first born, Gay

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While all this was going on in New York, I was about to produce my second child, but I wanted to stand by my father as long as possible since we had just lost my mother and thè confìscation of thè school had understandably been a blow to him. Also I had to find a new home for my own family and for my father since our school campus was gone and thè school year in thè hotel would end thè last of May. My excellent doctor Newlin Paxson, Head of Obstetrics at Hahneman Hospital in Philadelphia, would allow me all activity before thè birth but nothing strenuous for several weeks afterwards. The sanie weekend of thè turmoil and threat of eviction from thè New York hotel I had located a house to move into but had to make thè move before thè first of March. There were three trailer-truck loads of possessions from thè school. (We had had only a couple of days to move out of thè school buildings before thè Navy occupied them, so I had hurriedly gathered my favorite library

It was, of course, freezing cold, yet all thè doors had to be wide open for thè men to come and go unloading all thè furniture, including thè grand piano. I kept beating up batches of scrambled eggs, filling large tumblers with Bourbon Whiskey, and stoking high flames in all thè fireplaces. By three a.m. thè job was done, thè men left exhausted but not unhappy, and I drove back to thè Philadelphia hotel where my husband and 2-year-old daughter were staying. Then off to New York to encounter thè situatimi at thè Barbizon Plaza! My son was born thè following week. As I was growing up, my father would often counsel me by saying, “Learn to make decisions quickly. Be decisive. You won’t make any more mistakes on thè average than if you vacillate or can’t make up your mind.” Also, “Be independent, be your own boss. Whatever you go into as your life’s work, be your own master.” I guess I took these wise words seriously, for my life has certainly followed that pattern.


CHILDHOOD

Salute to a Favorite Cousin Cris and I are thè oldest, most independent and thè least inhibited of thè Leavitt grandchildren. The latter traits were probably inherited from our respective mothers and our spirited grandmother, Mary Kelly Leavitt. Early on Cris and I developed an affection for each other and a “mutuai aid pact” which continues to this day. While we were teenagers, Cris’s part was to help me acquire “dates” when I visited Swarthmore for Mary Lyon School dances. I should have followed her advice more often. One Mary Lyon girl I invited to a Hotchkiss school prom bore out Cris’s prediction when, during a dance intermission, I found my date holding hands with one of my classmates. That was about as far as one could go in those pristine days. Later on I sought to be helpful to Cris when thè School’s final term was moved to thè Barbizon Plaza in New York after thè Navy took over thè school buildings in Swarthmore. The two of us had quite a time persuading thè Hotel management not to evict thè senior class on thè eve of commencement when there occurred a “cash flow” problem, not an uncommon event in Cris’s career. I was also involved as a trustee of Fleming College in trying to uphold Cris’s position when others on thè Board, including some parents and faculty members, ganged up

With favorite cousin Ros

Some people

MUST DREAM BROADLY AND

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GUILELESSLY, IF ONLY TO BALANCE THOSE WHO NEVER DREAM AT ALL. ArthurM. Schlesinger,Jr.

against Cris’s standards of undergraduate conduct. Mostly, we’ve gone our separate ways in our chosen professions, while enjoying each other’s company when our paths have crossed, be it in London or New York, as well as on visits to Frog Hollow Farm, Lugano, and Tuscany. Throughout thè intervening decades, there has never been a dull moment when we were together. All I ask for is more of her company, even if its only nude swimming in Tuscany! Roswell Gilpatric New York City

College Girl’s Escapades Lest thè reader think that Mary Crist was young “Miss Innocence,” I include two tales from her college days. Her classmate Marie Silsby Essig has a memory of her selling her clothes to pay for a car wreck she didn’t want her parents to know about. I also remember hearing about her secluding herself for a week’s study with all thè relevant library books that she needed to prepare for exams, then appearing for exams all dressed up with hat and white gloves, full of composure. Another tale I couldn’t resist including from thè early days is Mary Crist’s determination to visit a young man whom her parents disapproved of and forbade her to see. She went to visit him anyway. Shortly after leaving home while speeding up thè highway to New York, smoke started billowing out from under thè hood of

thè car. A guilty sense of immediate retribution struck! Upon inspection, however, and discovering an oily cloth on thè engine, yours truly closed thè hood and continued on her journey. After her return home Sunday evening nary a word about this affair was ever mentioned again by her parents. Editor P.S. My mother’s obvious zest for life and all its facets inspired her words of advice to her daughters: “A woman should be a cook in thè kitchen, a lady in thè parlour, and a_______ in thè bedroom.” Now, I’m sure she would add, “and a director in thè Board Room.” Further advice: “When things get tough, put some more lipstick on a stiff upper lip.”

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T H I R T I E S

MCF’s Anecdotage One thing that pleases me very much is when my daughter Lynn tells me what a wonderful childhood she had and that she wants to be able to give a similar upbringing to her children. We travelled a great deal together in Europe. I wanted my children to become “world citizens”, for I was already amare of a shrinking planet; I also thought that for them to learn languages was important. I was borii and brought up in a school where my mother and father lived right in thè center of thè school. We had only a small apartment and I remember rather longing for a home of our own. I remember I used to re­ decorate thè apartment, even though it was very small. I used to organize my parents’ closets and thè way they lived because they were so involved in thè school that they didn’t bave tinte to create a reai home. I think tliis is one reason why now I enjoy so much having three homes, even though they are often used for thè business of my present schools. Houses carne to mean a great deal to me after living in thè middle of a public situation, namely a big girls’ boarding school. They say even now that if Tm in a telephone booth more than five minutes I will decorate it! Surroundings were very, very important to me, which is why I think they are so important for young people. I try to transmit a love of beauty even though most young people don’t seem to appreciate it. I think it is important for them. Later on many of thè students do, and when they come back to visit thè school, or me, or at school reunions, they always say how much thè experience meant to them, even though at thè time they didn’t appre­ ciate it. In retrospect their surroundings and experiences at TASIS carne to mean a great deal to them as adults. My childhood was in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Even then I wasn’t fond of thè town, young as I was, because it was a Quaker town, which meant it was very narrow and austere. I wanted to break out of that cage. I felt limited by it even as a young person, though that feeling was relieved by thè fact that my parents took me travelling a great deal to Europe and put me in a school in Switzerland for a year. I was an only child and rather enjoyed that. I never felt thè lack of a brother or a sister; I had some cousins, but wasn’t particularly dose to them when I was growing up.

Young lady Mary supervises her cousins' choosing up sides

“My mother always wanted to make sure I was being productive.”

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I don’t think I was spoiled because every titne I was given something I had to accomplish something to balance it. I begged to go to a school in Switzerland, for instarne. Actually it turned out to be exactly what my parents had wanted to do, to send me to Switzerland to learn French, but they allowed me to think it was my idea. My mother thought it would be a good challenge for me while I was there to take thè College Board Examination in second-year German, after having only three months of tutoring to prepare for it. I passed. She always wanted to make sure I was being productive. When they sent me to Russia on a special trip I had to write a book about Russia, which I did. I now find it an amateurish, foolish hook, but I had to fulfill my part of thè bargaiti. I won’t say there was a price to be paid, but rather like “noblesse oblige”, if you receive a privilege you are supposed to return it in some measure. They were strici with me that way, for which I am grateful.... "Horseback riding was thè only sport I ever liked."

:fNs|g5

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Excerpts from No Soap and thè Soviet by “Mari Christopher” [Editor’s Note: As much as Mary Crist Fleming protests that her book, written 55 years ago in return for a trip to Russia, is a foolish one, and as much as thè style is “tongue-in-cheek, ” I would venture to say that her perceptive commentary on life in Russia in 1935 would stili be valid today. And that is “Pro­ gress”? There is stili no soap in thè Soviet, or little else for that matter, as witnessed by thè miners’ strikes last year. For an individuai with a reai sense and appreciation of beauty and freedom, a month touring Russia was more than enough to reaffirm her beliefs and values and appreciation of thè West. Mary Crist was no “fellow traveller. ” The keen observations in thè storytelling may be masked and enlivened with humour, but perhaps this is more effective than thè weeping that historical hindsight would really necessitate.]

by

Mari Christopher

Illustrateci by Mark Bent

1936 THE RED RAM PRESS

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BUM VOYAGE Russia or busti This positive if inelegant obsession has been gradually forming through thè past couple of years, deluged as we have all been under thè RED books of every sort and description—Red Smoke, Red Virtue, ditto Medicine, ditto Bread, etc.—written more than likely by weighty authorities who have dashed in at Leningrad and out at Moscow with a couple of days in a Detourist Lincoln in between. Even so, it stili takes an alluring pamphlet advertising a comprehensive and organized month in thè U.S.S.R. to touch off thè final fatai spark of ambition to See for Yourself! This decision is so momentous it takes your breath away and should presumably sweep anything in thè way of paltry monetary considerations out of your path. It doesn’t. You can risk your neck and future capitalistic support if you like, but nobody else is going to pay for you to do it. When you actually get together thè wherewithal and purchase a thirdclass passage, it is distinctly with a feeling of achievement and thè last word in self sacrifice. You are all set for a stupendous adventure whose appeal assumes greater magnitude each day until you finally board ship, fillcd with a sense of mental largess and a boundless intellectual comprehension. In short, you are fully prepared to be led, docile and unwashed, over one sixth of thè world’s surface. The days of Crossing fly by in an excited fever of reading up on Russia, attending peptalks given by thè leaders for your enlightenment, and generally working yourself into a lather of enthusiasm over thè good old U.S.S.R. Studiously avoiding some ninety very odd companions of your adventure, you are stili doomcd to encounter during off moments scveral Harvard Ph.D’s and thè inevitable group of lady clubwomen. These last are sweet


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but slightly hard of hearing, so that all information has to be relayed for them to report to thè “Girls” back home. The Harvard species is less easily labeled but more easily detected, even away from their naturai habitat, for they are usually web-footed from walking in thè Cambridge slush, have a crop full of broad A’s, always travel in bands to avoid attack, and may be seen flying from Museum to Museum. Then there is Mrs. Prevent, thè authority on birth control from New York, who has all thè men in a huddle around her, and is going to study birth control in Russia. I might just as well teli you now as later—it’s all abortion and only takes three minutes—imagine going three thousand miles to see a three-minute operation! But that’s beside thè point; you can always count on someone going to thè Soviet to study thè sex situation. Finally there will be thè Wright brothers from Weazleville, Winnesota. Not thè originai airplane brothers, of course, but a couple of highfliers nevertheless, who are called Jug and Skike, believe it or not. These two represent thè Youth of America, thè Spice of thè trip and thè Bane of Stalin’s existence. In such approved company you speed thè Hull way to Helsingfors, mapping out en route your pian of campaign and fairly bursting with eagerness to carry out final preparations. As a check to haste, however, thè shopping center of Helsingfors boasts some very alluring “Bad” houses, where many of our party spent thè whole afternoon and carne out all washed up. You really should not waste time on your way to Russia taking a bath, though, since you won’t have one during thè month you’re there, and it’s better to get dirty gradually and then stay dirty, than it is to become soiled all at once. All soaping aside, there’s too little time anyway to solve thè question of arms and thè task of purchasing a sufficient supply. The League unfortunately does not countenance Russian armament Stores in Finland, since this would be in direct violation of all treaties about anything. So one has surreptitiously to buy as much toilet paper and as many prunes as he deems necessary. Unfortunately, this involves higher mathematics as to thè number of sheets and prunes needed per day per person with Russia equaling X thè unknown quantity. It also involves a question of capacity versus transportation in regard to luggage. You can always take along an extra bag filled with old underwear and broken-down shoes. The Russians get all excited about a couple of shoes

that match, and underwear is enough of a luxury to upset thè whole Five-Year Pian. In Finland you can wrap thè fruit in thè toilet paper, thè toilet paper in thè underwear, and stuff thè under­ wear in thè shoes. Then in Russia you eat thè fruit, use thè toilet paper, dump thè shoes and underwear as you go along, and refill thè empty bag with Russian dolls and statues of Lenin. The well-equipped traveler will provide a quantity of lemons, for “A lemon a day keeps Russian tummy-trouble away.” Lemons are splendid disinfectants, and that’s what you’ll need nothing else but. Also, by all means buy a medium-size Meta stove—Meta is like concentrated Sterno—and be sure to have it with you

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wherever you are. If it’s too bulky to pack there is a helpful handle by which you may suspend it from your belt, in case you have a belt. Nevcr, however, be separated from it, since there are innumerable convenient uses to which it may be turned—such as wash basin, drinking cup and bug boiler. A Meta stove may be set up anywhere in Russia and work, which is more than you can say of anything else in thè U.S.S.R. Most important of all though— Soap. It is unknown to thè Soviet, is literally worth its weight in gold, and is thè most effective thing possible for tipping purposes. Take in great quantities of it, or else your private piece will be thè cake that launders a thousand slips. The most painless way actually to enter Russia is to go in unconscious. This is most easily done by getting on a train at any one of thè various vantage points in Western Europe and going to sleep. Helsingfors is as good a place as any, because it takes you five days on a boat from almost anywhere to get there and everybody knows there’s nothing like good salt

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sea air to make you sleep soundly and long. As a matter of fact, you probably won’t be able to slumber as you cross thè border line, for after thè Finnish porters have failed to dissuade you from risking your life by entering Russia at all, they will at least insist upon administering last rites. With tender solicitude they will awaken you for a last breakfast at thè farthest outpost of civilization, a Finnish railway station called Rajajoki. At this point you begin to lose your nerve and think that maybe thè joki’s on you! But a terrific meal of bread, rolls, butter, custard, coffee, milk, cake, oranges, cold meat, potato salad, chocolate, fruit, and mush, does something to revive your flagging spirits. Gorging what you feel may be thè last bun you’ll ever eat, you rush from thè restaurant at thè sound of a shrill whistle. From thè station platform your last way of escape, in thè form of thè Finnish train, is vanishing back over thè tracks to Helsingfors. In its place a rickety coach drawn by an asthmatic engine awaits without—without hope of getting anywhere! Three toots from a whistle in thè last stages of consumption, you jam your baggage into your mouth, fili both hands with Finnish food, and leap aboard. From here it is only a short ride to thè Russian border. The leaders suddenly remember that no written matter may be taken in, so you pass your last moments frantically reading through all recent Communications with family and friends. Fond words are imprinted on your memory and then torri up and thrown out thè window. American newspapers are perused and relegated to thè landscape. By now you are drawing near. A few minutes more and you arrive at a small river which separates thè two countries at this point. You hold your breath while thè train chugs precariously over an extremely delicate-looking bridge. When it comes to an exhausted standstill you take a deep breath—of Russian air! Surprisingly enough, life stili goes on, though from this moment you might as well have landed in Mars. Instantly hordes of burly Russians appear out of thè blue and swarm over thè coaches, taking immediate possession of everything in sight, including thè people. Buxom lassies with brawny limbs are quickly stationed at each end of every coach, and sentinels pace back and forth on thè platform. Alongside thè tracks an official-looking person behind what a Russian calls a table and in what he thinks is a park because it has half-dead

16

grass growing in thè form of a sickle and hammer, is selling beer and thè Russian conception of pink lemonade. Both thè beer and thè lemonade are being rapidly diluted by a fine drizzle. All baggage is soon carted from coach to custom house, where thè offìcials go sight-seeing in your personal belongings and keep up a running chatter of comment on each and every article. Nothing, however, will be confiscated unless you have defied warnings and taken in printed matter of any description, in which event they will probably seize upon it. English is all Greek to thè Russians, so a recipe for cheese soufflé looks like thè innuendoes of a bloated plutocrat, whereas a “New Yorker” might easily upset thè emotional life of 150,000 peasants by introducing a hearty laugh in thè country. While your first five hours in Russia are thus inspiringly spent taking your clothes in and out of your bag, somebody else is writing up your biography from your passport and translating you into Russian. If you carry a typewriter, phonograph, or camera you will go down into history, and Russian posterity will know that on thè 17th ofjuly, 1935, Mari Christopher was five feet, four inches tali, had brown eyes, a mole in thè middle of her back, eleven Eastman Kodak films and one hundred and eighty two dollars and seventy-nine cents. God rest her soul if she goes out of Russia with anything more!

ROUBLES [After writing about thè officiai exchange rate of 1 rouble to a dollar and thè temptation of thè black market exchange rate of 30 to 50 roubles to a dollar, she decides to brave thè hairdresser. For anyone who knows thè importance of MCF’s coiffeur her visit to a Russian hairdresser is particularly entertaining.] __ Roubles carne in handy too when 1 rashly determined to take my life in my hands and


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enthusiasm that envelopes thè fìrst fortnight have my hair washed. Threc weeks of Russian suddenly reaches thè saturation point and coldirt and pulverizcd concrete from new and lapses into an endless chain of unappetizing crumbling apartment houses plus thè growing meals and nondescript machinery that becomes fear of an onslaught of wee livestock, reduced a sheer test of endurance. You discover that me to thè dire extremity of seeking a beauty parlor. This turned out to be a veritable hairU.S.S.R. is really a Detourist ad and means dressing establishment, a factory for thè literally “U Sure See Russia.” Detourist, thè washing of hair. A large building housed thè officiai and only travel organization in thè operations, with thè right wing set apart for Soviet, yanks you out of Finland and dogs thè sheep, and thè left for thè goats. There your every footstep fili you’re a border line case on thè way out. Detourist guides thus seemed to be regiments of peoplc being cut, washed, waved or shaved. Conveying thè become officiai representatives of thè Govern­ shampoo idea was simple, but my innocent ment whose password is “Nothing mentioned, desire for a water wave caused an immediate nothing explained” and whose privilege is to Soviet. Soviet is thè Russian word for “huddle” interpret Russia thè way Stalin wishes. This is and one is brought on by thè slightest crisis— why there are regular schools to turn out crises are practically continuous in Russia. This guides in much thè same way that thè Moscow one was caused by thè fact that there are no Calibre Factory turns out precision instruments. hair-dryers in thè country and so only marcels After passing through these training camps, are in demand. Not being able to speak Rus­ they can quote Marx or Lenin in any language, sian, I spoke louder English, until nothing but backwards, forwards, standing on their head or my vibrating vocal chords finally persuaded thè eating Borstch, but thè simplest question off hairdresser to give me a water wave and let me their beat will throw them completely. If you sit in thè sun for three hours to dry. A masterask one how to get to thè Dorgomilovsky ful haircut was also obtaincd—a cross between Church in Moscow he will reply “Religion is thè method used to cut curtain fringe and thè thè opiate of thè people,” or if you inquire which bowl-on-head effect cultivated by sailors. trolley car will take you to thè Metropole When our husky Beautician dashcd from thè Hotel he’ll probably answer “Electrification room for a moment, I looked fearfully at thè plus Soviet Power equals Communism,” which rest of his implements and was seized with a is all just too true to be much good. premonition that he might return with a lawnThis is somcwhat upsetting and makes it exmower; it was upsetting enough to have him tremely difficult to get at thè truth of anything. come back brandishing a twelve-inch razor. The most scarching questions bring to light thè Only my horrified expression and brute force most distressing answers. Mrs. Prevent, for indiverted him from shaving my neck with it. I stance, asked thè guide during a visit to an finally distracted him by waving a handful of Institute of Mother and Child Welfare, just roubles in his face. When he carne to, he inexactly what their procedure was in thè matter dicated that thè charge was eight roubles— of an abortion. The guide translated this to thè twenty cents. As I started to wind up a few doctor at thè head of thè Institute while we all curls, he popped off again and returned with a waited in suspense. The Doctor began to wave mob at his heels. Everybody was pointing and both hands and to spout at great length what talking at once, and it was some moments before sounded like very colorful Russian. For some I realized that they were having their fìrst look fifteen minutes we stood fìrst on one foot, then at a hairpin! Hairpins, it seems, simply don’t on thè other, momentarily expecting thè guide exist, unless there are few left over from thè to turn to us and relay some of this vast store Tzarist Regime, which may account for thè pre- of knowledge. Finally she swung around and sent absence of long hair and whiskers. On my began her interpretation. With bated breath we way out, I ran into a middle-aged woman from hung on her words. The answer carne. ”He our party, chaperoned by a guide, who had just says—‘Why not?’” paid $2.50 for thè sanie operation—in Russia, it Perhaps thè best way of all to be sure that any costs a tourist good money to have a conscience! information you get is completely unreliable is to ask two guides thè same question. In Stalingrad, THE SUCKER’S SOVIET during a tour of thè town schools, I took ocFour weeks in Russia is just two weeks casion, after passing through room on room longer than anybody can stand. The glow of occupied only by huge pieces of machinery to

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be taken apart and put together again by thè pupils, to ask, “But where are thè students?” A word to thè guide is suspicious, and our conductor thought thè question quite irreverent compared with thè long-winded stereotyped speech she was delivering on thè relative merits of dynamos and then again dynamos. However, to a second insistent inquiry, she replied confidently, “Out to lunch.” Three engines later, I heard someone asking another guide thè same

question. This time thè answer carne unhesitatingly. “The students, Madame, are away on a three months’ vacation.” If you had faced thè guides, though, with these obvious discrepancies in regard to time, they would not have been in thè slightest abashed. For while Marx means everything, time means nothing. When you began to wait for that Custom officiai at Belo Ostrov, you mercly started what you were going to con­ tinue for thè next month. Food is probably thè first thing you’ll start waiting for. The Russians wait for it standing up in long bread lines, but tourists wait sitting down in hotel diningrooms. They know that tourists won’t walk out on them, for thè only other diningrooms in Russia are thè communal halls in apartment houses. You wait on iron cots in sumptuous hotel bedrooms amid gorgeous hangings and knickknacks from thè Tzar’s banquet hall for your baggage to show up. After thè first two days, you go down to thè basement and get it yourself. In thè bathroom, surrounded by elaborate plumbing, you wait for thè water to run. You also wait for busses, boats, trains, and anything else you didn’t bring along from home. The most you can ever hope for in thè way of a bath is brought up in a teapot, since thè principal difference between trains and plumbing in Russia is that if you wait long enough thè train will run, but thè water won’t.

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As far as food is concerned, it isn’t worth waiting for. However, since Detourist has an iron-clad rule that tourists may see only one thing in thè morning and one more in thè afternoon, you might just as well spend your time in thè diningroom as anywhere else. Meals are ceremonies preceded by a two-hour delay where he who serves only stands and waits. They occur at peculiar hours, with lunch at four and dinner as near midnight as possible, and thè time thus taken up is spent most profìtably in wiping off thè silver. Detourist is very particular about what you should see and even more fussy about what you shouldn’t, and of course six hours’ eating and ten hours’ sleeping does take you off their hands for a considerable portion of thè day__ When you are not eating or sleeping or seeing one of your two sights for thè day, Detourist keeps you sitting in a bus__ There are various other horrible things that can be done with a Russian bus, and Detourist thinks of all of them. Probably our worst experience was riding through Georgia, on a journey from Orchinikidski to Tiflis. This southern section is full of gorgeous Swissy sccnery and is so far from Moscow that most of thè people have never heard of Stalin and don’t know there is a U.S.S.R. However, by thè time five large open-air busses got through with our party, we weren’t in any doubt as to our locality. For thè first few hours after we started out, thè riverbed, which our driver had mistaken for a road, seemed to be quite levcl and ran through a valley cut between steep and jagged mountains__ ... thè inhabitants of thè town [Kasbek] had gathered around thè busses to gesticulate wildly about something. They all wore thè regulation Cossack hats and square sheepskin coats that covered them from neck to toe, had a wingspread of some four feet and looked like an extremely large edition of a Snuggle Bunny without thè zipper. The terrific commotion meant nothing in our young lives until one of thè leaders finally told us that thè road ahead was a complete washout. We knew this alrcady, but he meant from rain. There wasn’t enough gas­ oline to go back to Orchinikidski; and we all decided we’d rather spend thè night in a moun­ tain torrent than be just a lot of faces on thè barrooin floor at Kasbek. So with a hundred of us preferring thè great unknown to anything we’d so far seen in Russia, thè leader finally prodded thè chauffeurs into braving thè terrors ahead in


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thè hopes of reaching Tiflis by nightfall__ From Kasbek thè road mounted suddenly way up into thè mountains where it developed hairpin curves along thè edge of precipices. These went to thè driver’s head with thè result that thè old rattletrap shuttled along at breakneck speed hitting thè top of every other mountain. Now and then we passed a teensy-weensy hamlet holding on to thè cliff for dear life, and thè pinnacles were covered with discontented cows who spent all their grazing hours trying to keep from sliding into thè ravine. Nothing short of a waterfall across thè trail could have blocked our precipitous progress. Providentially, we soon carne to one sprinkling boulders all over thè road for some fìfty yards. Most of thè men got out at this point, and with thè lightened load thè bus gathcred up its front wheels and jumped. The next washout we carne to, however, was rapidly degenerating in­ to a flood so that we had to abandon thè busses altogether. We all dismounted laden like a packtrain with top coats, canes, Russian baskets, cameras and rolls of toilet paper. The fìrst dozen people to wade into thè rapids removed all traces of footwear and with shoes in teeth did a little Èva act. The rest grew recklessly nonchalant and thinking they’d probably never reach Tiflis plunged in regardless. The next washout was even bigger and better, but Detourist suddenly produced a couple of donkeys out of a hat to carry thè ladies across. These last were duly transported two by two screaming voluble protests at every step of thè way, and looking like a premature procession out of thè Ark. Others pulled their skirts up over their heads and struck out on their own with thè water swirling around their midriffs so that they resembled a bunch of inverted umbrellas bobbing along with thè ride. About two miles beyond this cataract, we stumbled over Passanaur, where we passed several hours, and almost passed out! Hungry enough to eat

miinnm

tomatoes and cucumbers [thè staple at every meal], we all muzzled into a six o’clock blupper— thè meal of thè day. When we were strong enough to stand it, thè leaders informed us that there were just as many washouts ahead, from which we derived thè intense satisfaction that we were at least holding our own. On Valuta’s [thè head guide, so-called because of a mouthful of gold teeth] assertion that there wasrit a bus in all thè Russias that could make it, we had thè joy of discovering that whereas we couldn’t possibly get to Tiflis, thè only alternative was to settle into thè oven of thè restaurant kitchen. To our amazement we were called three hours later and told that we were to leave for Tiflis after all; to our horror we found that in thè drying process footgear for thè whole party had been shrunk two sizes by an over-zealous landlord! In acute pain, we all limped into thè new set of old busses. With thè help of skyrockets and two guides on each running-board to show us how to ford Russian rivers in three lessons, we almost collapsed, turned turtle and capsized some dozen times before finally and actually reaching Tiflis at three A.M......

RUSSIAN ROOSTINGS Most Russians dwell in brand-new apartment houses—if they are lucky. If they aren’t, they are supposed to sleep in a friend’s clothes closet, which is a purely hypothetical state­ ment, since there aren’t any clothes closets. In reality, their left-overs live herded into stray rooms in old houses which are waiting to be liquidated (Liquidate means destroy or utterly eradicate, and is thè Government’s pet word for everything that hasn’t been built within thè last twenty minutes), or else they simply migrate from thè Ukraine to Siberia and back again, curling up in thè gutter in between. However,

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on an organized tour, you are carefully shown thè lucky ones and their homes in thè New Workers District of various towns. The Gov­ ernment is pretty pleased with these buildings, to put it mildly. Actually, they look a good deal like thè storeroom dregs of a paper box company, and in construction seem to be just about as stable. As you stroll around midst whirling plaster, you shudder to think what would happen if thè breezes should start blowing, and you walk with your toes turned pigeon in thè fear that accidental contact with a wall will cause thè whole structure to go into spontaneous combustion. Living in one of these buildings is approximately like permanent residence in an Automat— everything within reach, and thè all-pervading smeli of dead dinners. On entering, probably thè first thing to meet your nose is a large room, where thè thoughtful Planning Commissar has built four walls around some 4000 cubie feet of bad air and left it to rot. The perfume of thè place brings tears to thè eyes and handkerchief to thè nostrils. This is generally known as thè Recreation Room and is thè center of thè communal social life. Instead of going out to thè movies of an evening, thè Russians have their good clean fun right here at home. Here they view vivid cinema premieres of seed-planting in Siberia or take part in an elevating little discussion of a Utopian trolleycar System; here they learn everything from “How to become a Communist” to thè faets about thè family life of a guppie. The floor is completely covered with cane bottomed chairs, which succeed in lending anything but thè home-like touch, and thè walls are tastefully draped with brazen banners and bold black headlines probably representing thè bright sayings of Marx and Lenin. Readable as a Chinese laundry ticket, it’s a safe bet, nevertheless, that they’re just a few more cracks at Capitalism, Religion, and other old Spanish customs. In Russia each smeli leads to a worse one. You never think of going from place to place in thè Soviet, but rather from Smeli to Smeli. In this case, you are drawn from thè overpowering aroma of thè social hall into an odorous conglomeration of sickly beets, thin-soled shoes, potatoes, matches, shapeless haberdashery, butter that looks old and discouraged, antique bread, various stages of decaying cabbage, and that’s just about all. This mess is thè Com­ munity store, where all thè apartment dwellers do their shopping, and wait for thè next Five-

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Year Pian to bring in thè chicken for Sunday dinner. Waxed paper and cellophane being unheard of, parcels are done up in newspapers, if at all, so that these improvised wrappings can then be used for Roll-your-own cigarcttes. From thè scanty stock on thè shelves, thè store looks as though it had just been opened, but smells as though it should just be closed. Nobody seems to mind a little detail like that, however, for a long queue waits at thè ticket office for thè slip that portions out thè day’s rations. The meal ticket each person carries specifies his approximate earnings, so that thè price he pays per pound for butter varies according to whether he’s a ditch-digger or a diplomat. This may be thè way they do it, or on thè other hand it may not. We spent thè afternoon trying to worm it out of thè guide, and at thè end of thè seance weren’t quite sure whether it was her idea or ours. Anyway, it’s a swell one. From thè store you wander into thè com­ munal dining hall. Everything is depressingly dirty, and thè tablecloths have enough spots on them for every meal since thè Revolution. The window sills are considerably enlivened by a few anaemic weeds sprouting out of tornato cans and thè fact that thè flowers haven’t any fragrance is well concealed by thè redolence of Borstch. The daily menus here afford thè exciting variety of cabbage, bread, meat and cab­ bage, all equally unattractive, so that you can’t imagine being foolhardy enough to sample any of thè things you see on their plates. Stili, all this is just a matter of kopeks to thè apartment inmates, and if there isn’t any service, at least that does away with thè tipping__ Probably one of thè best locai bargains is thè Creche, or day nursery, for every apartment, where babies are parked at reasonable rates while Marna goes a-working. These Creches are supposed to be one of thè high spots of Russian achievement and look clean compared with thè rooms you’ve seen so far. The cradle is thè crux of Communism, or something. Anyhow, hopes for thè future are being staked in a large way on these nurseries, which have already produced a new generation successfully pickled in thè Communist spirit. In a Creche, thè babies have all thè privacy of thè Dionne quintuplets, but since everyone in thè Soviet is born, grows up and dies in a crowd, he might as well get used to it at an early age. There’s a certain element of chance as to whether Russians will grow up to work in a factory or on a Collectivc Farm, but there’s no


T H I R T I E S

suspense whatever in their life as babies. Until they are about eight years old, they are all indiscriminately called Decembrists, because once there was some kind of revolution in that month. The fact that you cali your baby a little Decembrist instead of an ootzy-wootzy gives some idea of thè part that sentiment plays in thè Russian houschold. All babies play, eat, and sleep together, and they all go in for collectivized potty-sitting. They lie around all day, wiggle their toes at pictures of Marx and Lenin and wait to become Young Pioneers at thè agc of eight. If that doesn’t give them enough to think about, they can always look forward to being a Young Communist at sixteen, or start hoping that they’ll be among thè lucky few to get into thè Party. They sit in little miniature chairs at long tables with a lot of other babies and are expected to feel thankful that they carne along at just thè right minute to enjoy thè fly— paper that carne in last year on thè Five-Year Pian. They’re just ingrates if they’d rather have a ducky-wucky for their bath, or decide to kick up a helluva row because there isn’t any soap, in case they’ve ever heard of soap. Also they could do with less exercising and without that Swedish massage ordered by Stalin as a daily routine for all little Decembrists. There’s entirely too much leg-pulling and hanging-bythe-head going on, and with all this muscle training it’s more than likely they’ll turn into trapeze artists, and then where’ll Russia be? Oh well, “Da-Da” as they say to all strange men—and “Nichevo,” which is merely thè Russian for “Yes-Yes” and “What does it all matter anyway?” At this point we leave thè infants all swinging through thè air with thè greatest of ease, and proceed upstairs to see thè home of Mr. and Mrs.—only in thè Soviet Mr. and Mrs., like all other titles, are simply boiled down to Tovarisch (Comrade). Of course everybody is away at thè factory for thè day, but living quarters may be visitcd just thè same and are all theoretically open to thè public from nine to four. Home is so humble there’s no place like it, and it usually consists of three rooms. Each one has three or four beds in it, since several familics share each apartment. They may eat in one of thè bedrooms if they feel thè urge, since it’s not compulsory to go downstairs to thè communal hall, but there is nary a private living or dining-room. There’s a fairly goodsized kitchen with a sink, a stove, and a nice big bathtub in it, covered more or less per-

manently with boards and used as a place to chop meat and pare potatoes. In spite of thè tub’s pleasant social setting, baths are not too frequently indulged in, perhaps because of thè universal lack of Soap and Stoppers. The kit­ chen sink doubles for thè wash basin, and thè other half of thè bathroom is out on thè stair landing, where it serves about four apartments, that is, some thirty or forty people__

Closets are conspicuous by their absence, probably because (a) they forgot about it and (b) there aren’t any clothes to hang in them anyway. This scheme no doubt does much to cut down thè yen for an extensive wardrobe and explains, as thè guide said, why only black shoulder straps, instead of pink or white, are available. As for Russian dressing, socks are sweeping thè country—being economical, they have a special appeal for Stalin. Shoes are a cross between an overshoe and an Indian moccasin; dresses are all one style—and look like brassieres with shower curtains gathered in at thè waist. There is only one corset and one pair of gloves in all thè Russias, and those have been there since thè Revolution in thè private possession of an Ex-Countess; after her death they’ll go into a Museum. As for headgear, there isn’t a hat with a brim from Leningrad to Yalta, and one of our party in a cartwheel picture-hat caused such a sensation that by now thè native women have probably taken thè wheels off thè tractors for an advance showing of spring millinery. But this season thè forgotten Russian women took to thè shelter of berets, and their bobs, marcels and cannine lips bore thè inevitable Soviet trade-mark of absolute uniformity, so that they all looked as like as peas in thè pod. Much to thè Government’s surprise, thè country is now flooded with feminine vanities—lipstick, perfume and nail polish! The explanations of this vary, from thè theory that these were made in Russia for exportation and

21


T H I R T I E S

then nobody would buy them, to thè story that a carload of piston rings for tractors turned out to be wee feminine gadgets in thè manner of a practical joke. At any rate, it was an accident, and there’s stili not much chance for soap and toilet paper until someone slips up again on thè order blanks__

ELBOW GREASE Russianally speaking, there are few professions possible in thè Soviet—professionally speaking, there are few Russians capable of filling them anyway. In thè case of 99 percent of thè population, there are really only three careers available—work in a factory, work on a farm, or a place in a brass band. All of these require skill and none of them get it. This does not of course include thè Idle Poor, who simply spend all their time milling around Russia accompanied by their cows, wives, children and a few tacky household possessions. However, a stroll along any Street in thè Soviet Union gives you thè distinct sensation that most of thè population are entirely free at all hours of thè day and night to accompany you on shopping trips and during any little peregrinations around thè city. At fìrst this is startling since you’ve been told at least once a day that Russia is one of thè few nations smart enough not to have an unemployment problem. When you conversationally cali thè guide’s attention to thè mob scene, he goes off with a bang right in your face and says that there’s more work to be done than there are Russians able to do it. You’d be thè last to dispute thè “able,” but that isn’t quite what thè guide means. His explanation has something to do with shifts in factories. At thè end of a few weeks, you become convinced that Stalin really handles thè unemploy­ ment situation by putting all thè riveters into thè orchestras and by letting thè musicians

22

erect scaffolding around thè new buildings. The result of this ingenious means of dealing with thè problem is thè disconcerting realization that even after an indefinitely long stay in thè Soviet you haven’t an idea in thè world as to what most of thè buildings look like. From a few exposed samples, though, you surmise that thè scaffolding is there to keep thè walls on thè building; and after all, imagine thè Government’s surprise if they peeled off thè scaf­ folding and found there wasn’t any construction at all inside! It would serve them right if it turned out to be a graveyard, since a lot of these buildings are literally made out of granulated tombstones. Of course concrete with thè customary sand and water mixture would be much simpler, but it takes up more time and has become a matter of sentiment to crack up these aristocratic slabs of black marble with gold lettering dating way back to Ararat__ In Russia you don’t have to work, as long as you’re willing to give up eating too. The ideal of keeping every one busy amounts to a religion where Machinery is God and Public is his Profit! However, thè professional possibilities for thè average man boil down to thè exhilarating choice between Farm and Factory. Skill, of which there is practically none in thè Soviet, is what counts, since you’re paid according to it. Naturai aptitude for a job is not exactly forbidden, but it is studiously ignored__ [The next three chapters—Time Out; Vim, Vigor, and Vitality; and Love Life—complete a comprehensive tour of thè U.S.S.R. and bring thè reader to thè...]

Era?

HINDWORD Now it can be told, when my pen is almost out of hand, that there is something yet to be said—about Russia. The hideous fact, possibly eontrary to what you may so far have suspected, is that in this paradise for plumbers there are to be found three of thè most valuable


T H I R T I E S

substances now in captivity. This does not in­ clude Sobriety, which they’ve gone in for in a big way and which takes thè place of Soap. If they take to liquor they’re liquidated, not by a couple of nights in thè hoosegow, but by having their stomach pumped and a fine imposed. Both thè pumping and thè fine get bigger with each offense. Nor do I mean thè tractors that divided stand and united stali, and whose omnipresence signifies Soviet supremacy in quantity at least. The time has come to speak of vaguer things, not cabbages nor yet of piston rings, but rather of some rarely communistic characteristics—in short: Spirit, Stamina and Song. Spirit is not here synonymous with wine and Stamina wasn’t thè name ofjug Wright’s Russian girl friend. Song, next to statues of Lenin, is probably thè most redundant thing in thè U.S.S.R. Music hath charms to soothe thè average Russian breast and thè result is that thè whole country sounds like a Glee Club. They sing themselves

into anything but thè bathtub, and then sing themselves out again. The fact that thè Russians live at all in thè Soviet is proof suffìcient of their stamina, though thè outward manifestations usually take thè form of Subotniks. This means any kind of social Service in your free time and accomplishes all kinds of miracles from thè building of subways to thè stamping out of illiteracy. It certainly requires intestinal fortitude, commonly known as guts, to take your one day off for even harder work—to take it and like it! The inevitable outcome is a tribe of Tarzans whose spirit is all too willing and whose flesh is far from weak. Lenin’s Utopia has become a fixation that they’d go through hell, fire and water to attain, and their hue and cry is “Workers of thè World Unite.” Small wonder, with such a battle cry, that Soap and Stoppers sink into thè limbo of Nichevo and that above its utterance is felt thè spirit of Never say Die—say Share!

— My parents’ school was a good school, a very strong school, and I did receive a good basic education, but I diàri’t want to go to college. When I graduated at 16 I wanted to study music and drama, but after a post-graduate year at my parents’ school, WildcliffJunior College, and a semester at thè New England Conservatory, I had a serious bout of influenza. My mother persuaded me when I had a very high temperature to go to college and I said, “Yes, if you just leave me alone”. But then I had to receive four months of intensive tutoring in Latin, French, English, and Mathematics, in order to pass thè entrarne examinations for Radcliffe College. Again it was their way of getting things done. Now I am grateful, but at thè time I wasn’t at all enthusiastic. By 1931 we were acutely affected by thè terrible Depression of 1929, when everything collapsed. I do remember it vividly. In two years we wentfrom a school of 200 students down to 30 or 40. I remember thinking what courage my father had. We had a vast dining room, and we put up curtains to divide it to tnake it look smaller. In thè big study hall which had 90 or 100 desks we took away many of thè desks, trying to make it stili look like a thriving school. Lots of schools closed during that period. But I remember thinking what courage my father had when he stood up in assembly and went through thè rituals of thè morning chapel. It was a very difficult time and I had to drop out of college for a year and a half because things were so tough; there wasn’t any money. Then I went back and finished in half a year, just to be sure to get my degree and graduate in 1933. My parents were so deeply affected by thè Depression that they thought they were goitig to be forced to dose and lose thè school entirely. They didn’t want me to be too emotionally distressed by it so they sent me to a language school in Perugia, Italy, for thè summer with a housemother from their school as chaperone. They sent me to Italy with thè magnificent sum of $800for both of us for two months. Since I spoke several languages, managed thè money and hotel arrangements, I chaperoned her more than I was being chaperoned. While I was gone my parents tnoved a few precious possessions to thè summer house in Maine. They only told me later thè story of how they loaded their station wagon with certain paintings and pictures, being sure they were going to be evicted and thè school confiscated. Actually I had a wonderful summer because Mussolini was infidi power then and thè Italian army was having military maneuvers down in thè plains bélow Perugia. It was a very glamorous summer because thè officers were staying at thè sanie hotel as I was, thè Rosetta in Perugia. Also, there were three Swiss boys from Zurich who were going to thè University, too. One of them was thè son of thè head of one of thè biggest construction firms in Switzerland. He was a very charming young man and we fell in love for thè sutfimer as we were going

23


T H I R T I E S

through thè revolving doors of thè Brufani Palace. He and his two friends picked me up every morning and took me to thè University, and then we carne back together and my chaperone fixed tea and chocolate and Italian pastries. She always had things ready for us, so 1 entertained thè three gentlemen in my room with her. Then we had dinner outside in thè courtyard with all thè very handsome Italian officers. The ojjìcers always invited me to go in their Alfa Romeos to thè Lake of Trasimeno where they had speed boats and I always accepted if I could take my three Swiss friends with me. I didn’t learn a great deal of Italian, because I had to speak French to thè Swiss boys. Sirice they couldn’t speak English and I couldn’t speak German, we spoke French as our common language. There were a lot of Americans in my class at thè University, but sirice I was always accompanied by thè three Swiss gentlemen they otily heard me speaking French. They often made comments about thè way I dressed, or, “Look at her, with three men all to herself.” Ori thè last day of classes I turned to one of those Americans and said, “Will you please dose thè window —there’s a helluva draft!” She nearly fell off her chair in consternation, recalling all thè conversations they had had about me all surnmer! After college my mother became very ili with cancer and consequently I had to help my father more and more. I travelled for my parents, trying to fili thè school. I used to travel all over thè country and was given S IO a day to cover thè car, food, hotel, everything. Dollars went a lot further then than they do now, but it was tight. I had a little Ford automobile, and I would go round and knock on doors of anybody who expressed any interest at all in going to our school. Sometimes I would drive right through thè night to save money or eat just a sand­ wich and a milk shake. In those days times weren’t as dangerous as they are now. In otlier words, there was no threat of kidnapping or being attacked. I never picked up anybody on thè road and I did like to drive and was a good driver, but I was very aware of thè seriousness of thè Depression. I am now very glad I went through it because it did teach me a lot. I was spoiled in thè sense that I was given privileges such as travel and education, but I was always expected to return something in kind. I felt a reai sense of responsibility to my parents. Even though it was tough training I accepted it, because a lot of people’s fathers were committing suicide, and whole families were being evictedfrom their homes as thè banks foreclosed on them. This training certainly stood me in good stead later on in thè struggle to create my own schools.

24


T H I R T I E S

Being thè daughter of thè headmaster I was always called upon to act as a sort of hostess, and to mix with people. I saw tny parents doing it so I just automatically slid into thè role. I was conscious of heing thè head­ master’s daughter, hut it never really bothered me other than thè jact that I was usually blamed for everything because my father didn’t want to show partiality towards his own child. I often got blamed for things I didn’t do, because he bent backwards to be fair....

The Desert Song Starring Mary Crist Fleming as Pierre Biraheau and thè Red Shadow The preparation, chorus practices, dress rehearsals, building of sets, painting scenery, learning thè script, all these were put to thè test thè evening of May 30th. And what excitement! Mr. Moore (our director) was busy with character make-up, “Dorothy” ready at thè piano. Mr. Martel hovered around with paintbrush in hand lest some last-minute detail be overlooked. When Mr. Hotz showed his smiling face at thè stage, door, we sighed with relief. For he is always our moral support, as well as our chorus director; and without him our backbone grows suddenly limp! On with thè show! Opening chorus on stage! Lights! A few breathless moments, then Curtain! In full swing we started, putting forth our best efforts while acting and singing, and, finally, feeling that thè audience topped it as thè suc­ cess of thè year. Now for a bit of thè plot__ The first scene finds us in thè camp of thè Riffs, who are thè supposed Bad Men ofMorocco. The Riffs (who are really helpers of thè oppressed poor) are worrying about Captain Paul Fontaine who is determined to capture them and their leader, thè Red Shadow. Next we fìnd Paul after he has discovered thè camp of thè Riffs and is planning to trap them all. Margot, Paul’s fianceé, appears on thè scene, having just arrived from France, and expecting a wild courtship with Paul under thè Moroccan moon. In this she is sadly disillusioned, for Paul’s duties take up most of his rime, and leave none for love-making. Pierre, thè son of General Birabeau, is thè weak boy who loves flowers and poetry and Margot, even though he will not teli her. In reality Pierre is thè Red Shadow—thè most dangerous man in Morocco—but of course no one knows this. His dual personality causes many tense situations. Margot soon finds herself in love with thè Red Shadow, who kidnaps her, taking her to thè place of Ali Ben AH in thè hills. There she gets all thè romantic ad venture she has ever desired! General Birabeau searches for Margot, and finally discovers thè hiding place. He challenges

There

The Mary Lyon and Wildcliff

are no

SMALL PARTS— ONLY SMALL

Glee Clubs

ACTORS.

Present

K. Stanislavski

THE SANDS OF MOROCCO A Comic Opera

Miller Crist Auditorium May 31, 1938

8:30 P. M.

thè Red Shadow to fight. This is thè climax, for, of course, Pierre will not fight his father. The Riffs, understanding only that their leader will not accept thè challenge, renounce him. Margot and thè rest go back to camp and find that Pierre has killed thè Red Shadow. The Red Shadow no longer exists. When Pierre sings thè “Desert song” to Margot, she realizes that he has been thè Red Shadow all along and all ends happily. Cast: Sid, Eloise Dey; Mindar, Lucile Heise; Hassi, Pat Shearer; Benjamin, Louise Fisher; Captain Paul Fontaine, Mary Sordoni; Azuri, Evelyn Downing; Lieutenant LaVergne, Doris Vehmeyer; Sergeant DuBassac, Betty Eichelberger; Margot, Margaret Stannard; General Birabeau, Frederica Pantlind; Pierre Birabeau, Red Shadow, Mary Crist Fleming; Susan, Caroline Bliss; Ah Ben AH, Katherine Dilatush; Clementina, Holly Hanson; Neri, Florence Bruzgo; Hadji, Betty Lou Waller. Holly Hanson Coors Golden, Colorado Former student, Mary Lyon School Alumni parent, Swiss Holiday (Reprinted from thè 1938 Wildcliff Junior College—The Mike)

25


T H I R T I E S

With my baby

__1 might have been a shy persoti except for my interest in thè theatre. I never liked sports except horseback riding, but I loved thè theatre, and acting and singing, and we did a great deal of it in school. I was always in plays and I think that keeps you from being shy. I know my children now say, “Mother, why didn’t you give us any public-speaking training?”, because they know how many times I have to speak in public to thè school. It never occurred to me to give that training to my children, because it carne rather naturally to me through my love of thè theatre, and they never expressed any particular interest in thè theatre. It’s true now that it would he an asset for them to be able to speak easily in public. Of course, my son has learned to do so because of his banking profession, and Gai has acquired confidence because being a missionary she speaks up about her faith. Since we lived in Swarthmore I went to theatre performances in Philadelphia, and thè small town of Swarthmore had a very fine amateur theatre. It was a professional small community theatre, and so I always attended their performances. I acted my first year in college with thè Harvard group, but I carne to dislike it because they produced very avant-garde plays and it was co-educational, because Harvard and Radcliffe collaborate; I wasn’t used to that, coming from an all-girls school. So I gave up being active in thè theatre. But maybe “once a ham, always a ham.” I was very impressed with thè outstanding actors of that period—Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine, Walter Hampden, Helen Hayes, and Katherine Cornell. These were thè big names in my day, in America, not Europe, but comparable to Laurence Olivier, Ralph Richardson, andJoliti Gielgud. They were thè sanie caliber of actor and I tremendously admired them. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to be able to act like one of them? But that was dream stuff because then I had to come back to thè realities of earning a living. I was 21 when I got married and I spent four or five years helping my father by travelling, recruiting, doing catalogs and sales for Mary Lyon School. I was also having my first two children....

daughter Gay

Little girl Gay, with papa and marna Fleming

26


T H I R T I E S

Miss Gay and Master Tom at Frog Hollow Farm

•ri*'-;-V4P J ' VC •.

rma . _______

______

Senior Luncheon at thè Wisteria Dressed in blue dirndle print, silhouetted against thè lovely background of thè wisteria, Mary Crist Fleming greeted thè seniors of Mary Lyon. Never had we seen such an adorable home! From thè kitchen to thè bedroom—all was completely model. Investigating every square inch with many “oh’s” and “ah’s,” we discovered copper ware from Brittany, originai oil paintings from Italy, tremendous French coffee cups, a white Fiorentine desk set, and a fìreplace too perfect to describe with a Miinchen donkey resting upon one of thè stones. Everything subtly told some adventurous tale, and we felt as though thè whole continent of Europe were spread before our eyes. We lunched outside on thè lawn, while thè May sun ogled us intently, and we think, perhaps, a little enviously. We started with tornato juice, then Bill (Mr. William Thomas

Fleming, III) cooked each individuai steak until it was sizzling and nous fait venir l’eau a la bouche! Then casserole potatoes and hot biscuits followed and Mary piling high our plates with a wonderful salad served from a bright Hungarian wooden bowl. Mary was thè perfect chef and hostess at thè same rime, surprising us with reai strawberry shortcake for dessert! The cake and strawberries simply melted in thè floating puff of whipped cream; we didrit think we could possibly be so hungry! After luncheon, we returned inside to inspect more of Mary’s treasures. There is only one difficulty after visiting Mary. I am terribly afraid all thè Seniors look upon married life as a completely different and much more wonderful institution! (Reprinted from thè 1938 Wildcliff Junior College—The Mike)

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T H I R T I E S

After theatre, her other great love: Travel

Into Yugoslavia: Six School Girls in a Ford

Life

is a

GRINDSTONE— DEPENDING ON THE QUALITY OF THE STONE, IT POLISHES YOU UP—OR WEARS YOU DOWN.

"Only a Ford could

Six men crisscrossing thirteen countries of Europe in two months by automobile should make an exceptional travel story. If six attractive American schoolgirls were to do thè same thing, their feat should include many more thrilling experiences than one would expect to End in any “girl adventure series.” With eighteen pieces of baggage and several tons of other paraphernalia that a half-dozen women insist on carrying when traveling “light,” six American girls have spent thè past two summers 3,000 miles from home, Fording Europe in a V-8 Phaeton! Last summer, Mary Crist Fleming of Wildcliff Junior College, in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, and fìve college companions missed nothing in covering thè map of Europe by automobile from its most westerly edge to thè borders of thè Far East and back. “Don’t be foolish! Six girls can’t possibly gallivant all over Europe in a car and return safely,” was thè substance of many a comment on thè contemplated vacation. Such frank challenges may explain thè origin of what was one of thè most daring and interesting motor trips yet undertaken by young women, alone and unaided by members of thè “stronger sex.” On both of their trips, Mary

make such a trip”

' mz, <\ Mst

:

*•»

28

Fleming has acted as driver-conductor. Her car was a 1936 Ford V-8, of which, after it reached America last fall, Miss Fleming said: “The car has been in Europe twice, doing 25,000 miles altogether, and stili is in excellent condition. I’m fully convinced that only a Ford could make such trips with comfort and economy. It passes thè most high-powered European cars on difficult Alpine roads with thè ease of a motorcycle shooting by a velocipede! And its fuel consumption and easily replaced parts make it thè most practical American car in Europe.” Speculating on thè many strange and exciting things they saw in sections of Europe which they would have missed had they not traveled by automobile, Miss Fleming added: “I hope to have a regular ‘Ford Fleet’ going over every summer!” Long before they reached thè countries of eastern Europe, where Occidental modernism is conspicuous for its absence, thè people were even shocked that women should undertake to drive an automobile! “Women without men—women chauffeurs!” ejaculated thè crowds that eyed thè Ford and its six occupants. As thè girls drove southwestward toward thè Balkans, thè natives were no longer shocked. The undertaking had then become an


T H I R T I E S

The beginning of tire troubles as my new Yugoslav friends supervise

act of bravery, and thè natives were inquisitive about reasons for attempting it. On their trip last summer, roads through France and Italy were good, but when they reached thè top of thè Adriatic Sea and dipped down into thè Balkans, not only thè roads changed, but thè people and life, as well. There thè East first became apparent as it blended with thè West: thè hat was replaced by thè tarboosh... carts by pack animals... water sellers, with sloshing, laden goat skins and rattling cups. The experiences of this two-month automobile trip through Europe would fili many chapters, but probably outstanding was thè invasion of Yugoslavia. At thè border of that country, where life today is stili as strange as its thousandyear-old history is fantastic, thè girls were halted by customs officials. Six girls in a car! Impossible! they were told. Never before had Yugoslavia been approached by women alone in an automobile. It was a trying situation. Records revealed that only six other American cars had ever attempted to drive across thè country, and not all of these had ever made a return trip. But thè young Americans refused to be turned back. In thè smile-language, which thè girls found particularly useful, they assured thè officers that their Ford car furnished ampie protection. Besides, one of them hastily dug deep into their luggage to thè ice basket, and displayed a good sharp ice pick! So into Yugoslavia rolled thè V-8 with six girls__

Six Srhooi diri* in a Ford

THE CARGO Carried through thirteen European countries in two months by a Ford V-8: 6 Girls 1 Ice pick 6 Pairs goggles 3 Top coats 6 Steamer rugs 18 Hand bags 3 Cameras 1 Carry-all for maps 1 Radio 1 Portable spotlight 1 First aid kit 1 Medicine chest 1 Case baked beans 2 Cases tornato juice 1 Fitted lunch box 1 Portable stove 1 Box canned fuel 1 Ice basket

Reprinted from Ford News (c. 1938)

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T H I R T I E S

She Was Our Passport Everywhere

"Mary Crist’s charm and gorgeous smile made ‘Fording Europe’ a delight"

JVLy years at Mary Lyon were great—"Fording Europe” was thè icing on thè cake. I shall never forget it. Sailing from New York on thè Normandie was fun. Henry Fonda was on board (drunk most of thè time but a good ping-pong player just thè same), Anatole Litvak (famous movie producer) and Colleen Moore were aboard—also two West Pointers who were bicycling Europe. They changed their itinerary to match ours and met us in several places. Mary (Dart) and Betty (Ralston) married them. The ship anchored off Southampton to unload cars to a tender bound for England. A British piane kept diving across thè bow and stern and finally hit thè crane unloading thè cars. I was standing a few decks ab ove and had a wonderful picture of it. Needless to say, offìcers appeared from everywhere. The piane rode on our bow into Le Havre. We were told they took it to thè French naval base in Bordeaux. When we reached Le Havre, there was a longshoreman’s strike creating another delay. It was dark before we got our bags and car off thè ship. After that, things went smoothly. We toured Normandy, Brittany, on to Paris, Biarritz, Chartres, thè Basque country, thè Riviera, Monte Carlo and into Italy. One night, driving in southern France, we carne to a railroad Crossing with thè gates down. Mary Crist blew thè horn several times and a farmer appeared from a nearby house, raised thè gates, closed them after we passed through, and went back to bed. Six women in

an American convertible unescorted created a sensation in every town we went through. Someone grabbed a cigarette out of Mary Dart’s hand while we were slowed down in some little town. When we got to thè Italian border, Mary Crist said, “Don’t turn on thè radio. There’s a tax on them”. She got out and went into thè little “guard house”; Mary Dart forgot and turned on thè radio! Somewhere near St. Marguerita a car smashed into us. No one was hurt and we were soon on our way again. We toured Italy from top to bottom. In Rome, we met Balbo, who was head of thè Italian Air Force, and Count Ciano, Il Duce’s son-in-law. We saw troops marching in Florence from our hotel balcony overlooking thè Arno river. Italy was at war in Ethiopia at thè time. (We couldn’t get a visa into Spain because of thè revolution there. In fact, King Alfonso was in residence at thè Hotel Meurice where we stayed in Paris.) The trip on thè Rhine was spectacular. Germany was different from thè other countries. Hitler was in power. The Olympics were in Berlin (1936). The military were everywhere. As I recali, it was at thè German border where Mary Crist had to declare our money. She had a money beh which she wore around her waist, and it took a little doing to get to it this particular time. Crossing into Belgium was thè most trouble. They took up thè floor boards to fìnd some kind of number they were looking for. The inspectors were rude.

ftDING EVROFèì

1939

5® mimmi-

30


T H I R T I E S

We had a rough Crossing to England. From Canterbury we went to London, then Shakespeare country, Oxford, etc. Then sailed for home on thè Ile de France. We were delayed 22 hours in reaching New York because of a storm. We were further delayed because thè “Follies des Femmes” of Paris were on board with all kinds of animals. That held us in quarantine for a while. We arrived home safe and sound. The food was superb everywhere we went. It took me two years to get from 180 to 125. Need I say more for French pastries, Swiss chocolate and all thè other goodies. Mary Crist’s charm, knowledge of Europe,

language skills, and gorgeous smile made “Fording Europe” a delight. She was our passport everywhere. I think Mary Crist inherited her mother’s charm. Mrs. Crist greeted us every noon and dinner time as we entered thè dining room. She always had a smile for us and a personal greeting. She was a gracious lady. Everyone loved her. Peggy Unger Henrys Cranbury, New Jersey Former student, Mary Lyon School

We Did It thè Way thè “Grand Tour” Should Be Done

■ i*

* i

*

“Wonderful Mary Crist

1 he year was 1937 when I travelled to Europe with Mary Crist, four other friends, and a Ford Phaeton. Mary was 27 years old, I was 20. We did it thè way thè “grand tour” should be done; we spent thè summer (10 weeks, I believe), toured 10 countries, and crossed thè Atlantic both ways by ship—thè Normandie going over and thè Ile de France on thè return trip. What a wonderful summer for five country bumpkins with wonderful Mary Crist as our guide.

as our guide”

We couldn’t go to Spain because of thè Civil War there, and we couldn’t go to Czechoslovakia because of thè tension at thè border with Germany, but we didn’t miss much else. Everywhere we went men and young boys were marching. Everyone knew or feared that war was coming, but to thè young, crazy girls in that Ford Phaeton it was very exciting and exhilarating. We did have a iew anxious moments in Munich when some Brown Shirts

31


T H I R T I E S

“Mary’s Doublé Life?”

Four Graces in Cannes: Lillian McFetridge (Wilson), Maggie Stannard (Kephart), Evelyn Swift (Hadsall), Holly Hanson (Coors)

32

stopped us, and again in Sarajevo where there was some politicai unrest due to a visit there of thè French politician Blum. We spent a week each in Paris, Florence, Rome, Vertice, Munich, and London. The remainder of thè rime we toured, visiting chateaux, cathedrals, etc. Mary, of course, used every opportunity to speak thè language of thè people wherever we were. The rive of us were in awe of her fluency in each language. She assured us that her German wasn’t as good as we thought it was, but we were impressed. The tour opened our eyes to a way of life, to cultures, to tensions, to beauty we had never known. Mary Crist has done this for many other young Americans. I almost forgot to mention that we had 13


T H I R T I E S

fiat tires on our tour. Mary has a talent you probably didn’t know about. She can change a fiat and patch a tube! My sister and I graduated from thè Mary Lyon School. We graduated in depression years, I in 1935 and Eileen in 1937. I know it was a struggle for Mary’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Crist, to keep thè schools (Mary Lyon and Wildcliff) running during those years. We had very good teachers, some were wonderful—I remember an elderly woman, Mrs. Tempie, who taught English—and we were well prepared for College. My enduring mental picture of thè Crists is at thè dinner hour at Mary Lyon. We all, students and faculty, gathered in thè reception room before dinner for conversation and “subdued” fun. Then we all went into thè dining room together and stood behind our chairs at our assigned tables. Then, with dignity and grace, Mr. and Mrs Crist walked in, grace was said, and we ate our evening meal__

Lillian McFetridge and

I hope thè affection and respect for thè Crist family shines through this report.

Kate Horweii cycle with

Mary Cris in En9|and

Lillian McFetridge Wilson Charlottesville, Virginia Former student, Mary Lyon School Alurnni parent, TASIS

America! America! JnLave you ever been confronted with thè question, “Are you glad you’re an American?” And have you ever shrieked, “Yes, yes, yes!” until you could shriek no more? I have. For I’ve been to Europe with Mary Crist. All of us saw, in thè past summer, a great deal more than most European tourists. I met a young Frenchman in Paris who had just returned from his military training term. He had hated it. Military training is a compulsion in Europe (with thè exception of England and Holland) in which every boy must spend two years before thè age of twenty-one. How would you like that, you Americans who think we’re in thè throes of Dictatorship?? Italy__ How would you Americans like to have your houses plastered with thè mottos of Roosevelt? So it is in this country every one told me I would love__ On every barn, house, stone wall, and tree trunk is Mussolini’s picture in a war helmet, with “Viva II Duce!” written below it. One of thè most frequent “proverbs” is “Obey, Prepare, Fight.” Let me teli you about our “border line boat story.” Cairn Lake Maggiore spread itself invitingly below our hotel Windows. This was Switzerland! All these mountains, this sand and sun, were Switzerland. All these clean, honest, simple folk were Swiss and we adored them! A boat ride

on thè Lake was a most enchanting suggestion for thè day. We brought along our passports, for we were to pass into Italy within an hour, and at any frontier or border line, passports, we soon found out, are extremely necessary. About us stretched thè vast Alps, and somewhere nestled in thè valleys would be quiet and contented villages. Everything about us seemed serenely happy. We were approaching Italy... then... Snap...like that it changed. We could have drawn thè border line across thè waters. The waters which were so smooth, so cairn, now seemed to tremble ever so lightly, as if they too knew a difference. On our right we viewed a girls’ training camp. We watched girls march, shoulder their guns, march again. On our left was thè boys’ training camp__ Beating time to Mussolini’s efforts to be a great leader, and to create a great people, and a greater military Italy__ Just that was thè dif­ ference of a border__ So intensely different, so strictly and morally different. But why? Why should a line drawn on a piece of earth decide thè fate of a people, of a nation, of thè world? The Italians adore Mussolini. They worship him as a veritable god. I asked one Italian why he liked his leader so much, and he replied very simply, “When I was a small boy, he patted me on thè head.”

But what is

LIBERTY, WITHOUT WISDOM AND WITHOUT VIRTUE? IT IS THE GREATEST OF ALL POSSIBLE EVILS. Burke,

Reflections on

thè Revolution in France

(1790)

33


T H I R T I E S

“l've been to Europe with Mary Crist”

mm 'ìm-w-P Holly and Ève at thè Hotel Europa

:.

34

They love him in spite of thè bitter taxes he presses. But how would you like to pay $1.20 for a gallon of gasoline, to pay almost a thousand dollars in taxes in order to keep thè car you own (if you make enough money to buy one), to be allowed to buy only Italian made products, no imports? As a reward for these taxes, new buildings are sprouting up, along with new camps, colleges, athletic fìelds, and lest we forget__ Guns, Uniforms, Explosives, Ships, Gun Cotton, Gases, Shells, etc....... The great Mussolini Forum in Rome, with its tremendous swimming pool and amazing athletic facilities, appears to Mr. American Citizen to be thè most perfect example of modern architecture and future physical development he has ever seen. But does such a person ever stop to consider thè amount of publicity and propaganda II Duce receives for such a venture? A most impressive memory is of Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. The Slavs seem to be famed for their uprisings. (Note: World War.) We six were squeezed in with thè rest of thè mob, not realizing there were no other women for blocks around. Some gun shots suddenly pierced thè air, our hotel manager was running swiftly toward us shouting, “Get out of here quickly or you’ll be killed! You have to leave Sarajevo immediately.” And we certainly did rush out of that throng ofmad Moslems! They are Moslems, you know, and they naturally hate Christians, which was another reason for thè dynamite atmosphere that hung over thè city. Heil Hitler! Yes, Heil Hitler, and why? A motion every German must make or be thrust into prison. A different Germany since thè beginning of Hitler’s regime. A suppressed and repressed Germany. A suspicious and whispering Germany. Would Americans stand for this? No! We want Freedom and Liberty—to speak as we please and to voice our opinions where we please. We won’t be held back; we’re going ahead. We want our Free Press and Free Speech. And we don’t want to be squashed and sat upon, should we utter thè reai truth of a subject! In England it rather got our goat that thè British should think we are so inferior to them —merely a young off-spring running wild. So we argued until we were blue in thè face with thè opinionated English, who aren’t really conservative, as it is said, but just down right stubborn! They see a thing on one side only, and try as you may, you can get just so far before you come up against a blank wall.


T H I R T I E S

The moral of this editorial is not to make you stay àt home, but on thè contrary, to travel more and to discover how we may make ourselves a greater nation by learning from thè faux pas of other countries. When they dance abroad, they dance to American jazz. When they go to movies, they see American films. Their clothes are copied from Hollywood designers, not Parisian. If they ride in luxurious cars, they’re American ears. And so it goes with all Twentieth Century ideas. Naturally we can’t compete with their Art and Classical Music which has come down to them through thè ages and long before Col­ umbus even discovered there was an America. But in modern conveniences and improvements, we’re leaving them far behind in thè dust. Our biggest stride has been in Sanitation. In that fìeld, we are leaps and bounds ahead of any other country. It is one of America’s greatest standards, and we must strive continually to draw it to perfection. We don’t want to be colossally conceited like thè English, suppressed like thè Germans, or hotheaded like thè Slavs. We want to be reai Americans! We want to live up to our Democracy......We don’t want to degrade mentally and physically because of a war. We don’t want to have opinions which cannot be

Holly—thè All-

expressed. We want to be frank and honest and open minded and value thè things in Life which will make our nation a greater nation__

American Girl

Holly Hanson Coors Golden, Colorado Former student, Mary Lyon School and WildcliffJunior College (Written for thè Wildcliff-in-Europe November, 1937 issue)

Fording Europe

Any trip was a carrot to me when I was young. Sheer bribery, of course; a trip to Russia, for instance, if I would write a book about it. But I was always held to my word, as you see from thè excerpts from No Soap and thè Soviet, my ridiculous attempt at a book, written ironically when so many Russian specialists were writing seriously on thè subject and now, with historical hindsight, particularly frivolous in light of thè horrors perpetrated under Stalin.

If no one would offer me a trip, I would create one myself. So with five girls only fìve minutes younger than I as their chaperone, I created “Fording Europe”. I bought a wonderful Ford Phaeton, convertible, of course, with a sliding center glass window as in a Rolls Royce, a baggage rack, half as long as thè length of thè car, which required doubling shock absorbers and springs. Ten bags stored in thè rack had to be identical and were covered with a tight tarpaulin measured to thè inch. Why it didn’t upend thè car as in thè clown act of a circus I don’t know, but somehow it worked and carried us for ten thousand miles across Europe. Included in this milcage was our being hoisted by a derrick on to six different boats, all of which we held up by anywhere from one to twenty-four hours for not reading departure instructions carefully, thè last hoist being on to thè “Ile de France” at Southampton. I had stored all kinds of emergency parts

35


T H I R T I E S

Breakfasting at Dives sur Mer: Mary Crist, Holly Hanson, Lillian McFetridge, Kay

“I bought a wonderful

Horwell, Evelyn Swift

Ford Phaeton” il

Teaching thè girls thè

4

delights of picnicking

f.

'•Fr fi -

1 The roads were terrible in Yugoslavia”

f f ri

36


T H I R T I E S

including fuses, tire patches, sterno stove, and cans of baked beans and spaghetti in case we got marooned. The tire patches proved to be a life saver, for after doing thè civilized part of thè trip, staying at thè Meurice in Paris, thè Negresco in Nice, and thè Ambasciatori in Rome, we headed for Yugoslavia. Remember, this was over fifty years ago and we were thè fìrst automobile full of only women to cross thè border, to thè total amazement of thè Customs control. The roads were terrible, only dirt and rocks, and thè only road gang we met was a Ione man pounding stones with a hammer. We had not gone very far when a mass of horses carne galloping across thè plain. It turned out to be part of thè Yugoslavian cavalry. The sight of thè long top-down Phaeton travelling at a fairly good clip in spite of thè road bed, combined with thè noise of thè motor, so frightened thè horses that they broke rank and fled in all directions. I said thè tire patches were a life-saver, for not very far into thè country we had our fìrst of twelve fiat tires and not one of us had ever changed a tire before. Happily there was an instruction book in thè car and by reading it out loud and looking at thè pictures we managed to get thè fìrst tire changed in four hours. As we were trying to get thè jack to work we spied a Ione peasant slowly coming down thè road. Feeling a man would at least have more strength to lift thè car (we had, of course, by then had to unload all thè suitcases to get to

“We had our first of • twelve fiat tires and not one of us had changed a tire before.” Note Mary Crist's white gloves!

thè spare), we showed him how to crank up thè jack. Once he caught on he was so pleased with himself, and with no common language to say “stop”, he kept on cranking till thè car toppled. After that we decided we were better off coping alone. Fifty years ago you could drive for two days without passing another car, so thè idea of waiting for help was quickly abandoned. We became very skillful, and repaired thè twelfth fiat in twenty minutes, patches, pumping et al. Needless to say, accommodations were unbelievably rustie and we had to carry our gasoline in containers as there were no gas stations between towns. I returned from this particular adventure in 1937 to be married two weeks later on September 15th. My husband was so intrigued with tales of thè trip that we decided to take two Ford Phaetons thè following summer.

“All baggage had to be unloaded before we could reach thè spare.”

A*-5**

t

/ '-

JB=~ i

37


T H I R T I E S

“Off we went, I a new bride travelling with nine beautiful girisi”

One of six similar hoistings

38

Off we went, I a new bride, travelling with nine beautiful girisi Even though I gave my husband thè job of waking thè girls each morning while they were stili in curlers and with no make-up, it was stili a risk, but one I was willing to take, thinking I was stili young enough

to get another husband if I lost that one. The prctticst girls always chose to ride in his car, which always followed my car, since I spoke some languages and had done much of thè trip before. Needless to say they usually fell far behind with all thè joking and flirting that was going on, and we would wait impatiently until thè dust settled down and we could see if he was stili there. Since most of thè signs were in Greek or Arabie he didn’t dare fall too far behind. Once when we needed to hoist our cars onto a vessel to cross from Bari, we failed to allow propcr travel time. We screamed through southern Italian villages from Naples to Bari with our horns blowing, our motors roaring, tops down, our gals waving to thè villagers, chickens and geese running frantically in all directions, old ladies sticking their heads out of Windows to see if a war had started, only to pulì them in suddenly as they saw our caravans approaching and leaving in a cloud of dust as we rolled out of town. We stili couldn’t make thè boat on schedule, but because we were two automobiles and 12 passengers they delayed thè sailing for three hours. When we arrived breathless from our frantic race, other passengers angry with thè delay assumed we were a famous ballet group worth waiting for and that my husband was thè impresario! We had planned to go through Bulgaria to Turkey. By bad luck thè Turkish consulate in


T H I R T I E S

New York was closed when we went for our visas before setting sail on thè ocean-liner “Ile de France” with thè two cars and our ten girls. We tried fìrst in Paris at thè Turkish Embassy and then in every capitai city of Europe we travelled through, always running into a Saint’s Day, a weekend, or a national strike. Our last hope was in Sofia, Bulgaria. Stili no luck—we either had to lose two days for thè Embassy to reopen or to push on for Istanbul, hoping to be able somehow to cross thè border and get our visas once in thè capitai. Needless to say thè guards at thè border were totally non-plussed and had no idea what to do with eleven women and one American male at midnight and with no entry documents! They fìnally decided to place a police guard in one of thè cars, mine naturally, and we set out literally across no-man’s land stili a few hundred miles from Istanbul. I must have been very tired as my husband honked me down saying I was weaving across thè road. The girls, of course, were all sleeping, so he made me stop for a short nap. The sudden stop woke thè girls who made supper while I slept. I stili remember thè flickering light of thè ster­ no stoves, thè spread out plaid blankets with ten beautiful women stretched out and a very suspicious Turkish policeman, who had never before eaten American baked beans! Dawn carne as we approached Istanbul and I will always remember thè storks perched on one leg on every roof top of thè city—an omen for a young bride? I was allowed to ensconce thè girls and my husband in thè best hotel in town and off they went to showers and bed. But I was carted off to thè Central Police Sta­ tion after being allowed to talk to thè American Ambassador, who admitted he had no due what to do. He had never encountered this before—twelve Americans passing thè border with no visas? I asked for an interprcter at least to go off to jail with me. I thought I was being interrogated by Mustapha Kamal, there were so many pictures of him all around and thè atmosphere was so tense and hostile. Their final question was: “Did you say you had difficulty getting visas in Sofia?” From thè way they looked at each other I gathered I’d hit thè jackpot. I enlargcd thè problems in Sofia as though they obviously wanted to deter me from going to Turkey. Suddenly thè atmosphere changed, I was brought a tray of coffee, that mud-in-the-bottom-ofcup kind, and sweets; an officer was called in

and told immediately to stamp our passports with Turkish visas and to give Madame a special escort back to her hotel. On thè way back thè interpreter from thè Embassy told me there was reai hatred and suspicion between Turkey and Bulgaria and that without my knowing it, I’d hit upon thè best ploy possible! The Ambassador was so amazed and impressed he called me at thè hotel to ask all about thè events, as he had never had such a case before— and probably hoped he never would again! Studying thè map and now knowing thè condition of Turkish roads, we decided to put thè girls on a boat from Istanbul to Constanza in Romania while we drove thè distance. We could have loaded thè cars on thè same boat, but there was a Turkish strike in thè port so no cars were being loaded. After shipping thè girls off with their passports and almost all our money, I talked or rather gesticulated to two seamen sitting alongside a rather high barge tied to thè dock. With more gestures, a couple of planks, and a show of money they indicated they would be willing to load thè two cars and take them out to thè Italian steamer and its big winch for cargo loading. The man indicated my husband would have to help him hold one plank while he held thè other and I drove thè cars onto thè barge. It was a pretty steep incline, so you had to gather a certain speed to climb thè slope. At thè same time thè ship was rather narrow so you had to stop abruptly or drop into thè Black Sea—a bit risky, but a lot better than several hundred miles on those hot, dusty, and almost impassable roads; also, a sea voyage sounded restful after what we had been through. So, with my husband holding one plank and thè longshoreman thè other, I made a running start, hit thè boards, and found myself on deck all right, but immediately confronted with a wispy wire railing—and thè Black Sea. Good old Ford brakes, and I even managed to do it twice! The longshoreman then put my husband and me into a row boat, rowed by a friend, indicating he would follow us to thè ship. Our girls, knowing we had intended to drive, saw thè barge approaching with our by-nowbeloved vehicles on board and us in thè row boat. All thè handsome young Italian officers on board had immediately made up to our girls, being female, young and beautiful, and they were all standing on thè top deck cheering and clapping as we approached. Needless to say, thè girls had a gala voyage sitting at thè officers’ tables and dancing every evening.

39


T H I R T I E S

“Could all this have possibly been a forerunner of Swiss Holiday?—when again with no one offering me a trip, I created Swiss Holiday Program in 1955, starting with 4 buses fanning out across Europe,” Betsy Bacon supervises.

40

Could all this have possibly been a forerunner of Swiss Holiday? When again with no one offering me a trip, I created thè Swiss Holiday Program in 1955, starting with 4 buses fanning out across Europe. It grew to 22 buses camping as thcy went, and, after a week’s excursion into France, Germany, or Italy, returning to a beau­ tiful villa based in southern Switzerland. I used to spot check thè Swiss-Holiday VW. buses of campers in my Lancia convertible, showing up at any unpredictable spot just to be sure they were behaving themselves, not acting like “Ugly Americans”, but doing credit to their country as touring Ambassadors. On one of my trips I spotted one of our VW. buses down in thè valley and took off after it like a swooping eagle. As I approached I saw laundry hanging out thè back, a broom and a couple of buckets banging in thè wind with old shoes tied onto thè handles. I stepped on thè accelerator, my blood pressure mounting along with my anger. “I’il nail those young ones”, I thought as I approached thè bus. Then I suddenly realized there was a French license piate and a small tricolor as well as berets in thè back seat. Hanging in thè window at thè back of thè bus was a sign that read: “Nous avons une vielle dame de cinquante ans que nous serons enchantés de changer pour deux de vingt-cinq!” I wondered whether I should apply for thè job? But I couldn’t help chuckling as I

turned around and took off in search of another little blue really-Swiss-Holiday bus. Could my son, Tom, have some of my blood in his veins as he drove all returning Swiss Holiday buses up thè curving steep hill to Villa Verbanella that no other driver could manipulate without scratching them or as he set off with a relief bus to replace one that had broken down, so as not to delay thè travels of thè students? One special moment I will forever remember when he was only fourteen and had no driving license. I sent him off at midnight with a few sandwiches and very little money, but a promise to cable more, to replace a bus in Barcelona.

“Could my son, Tom, have some of my blood in his veins... ”


T H I R T I E S

He made it as he always did, his mother with fìerce guilt pains until he called saying: “Where thè hell’s thè money, Mother?” After three years at Deerfìeld, four at Harvard, three and a half in thè U. S. Navy, which he says was a cinch after Deerfìeld, he is now President of a large bank in Washington and a sufficiently good father to hclp his 12-year-old son clean out dog kennels on a Sunday morning! Surely some of my blood was transplanted to my younger daughter, Lynn, as she whipped up and down thè highways and byways of Italy in her small mini as Manager of ARTE—thè American Repertory Theatre in Europe, our student theatre program which operated every summer for five years performing in thè ancient Roman thcatres from Verona to Pompeii and Taormina, and in a lovely piazza in Venice, bringing Shakespeare and Greek and American Betsy, Tom, and I enjoy a reconnaissance trip to Naples

co *..

Tom, a successful banker in Washington

"Surely some of my blood was transplanted to my younger daughter Lynn...”

41


T H I R T I E S

(Sppwu'iù

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“Our student theatre program, performing in

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to a lovely piazza in Venice

42


T H I R T I E S

dramatists into those magnifìcent opcn-air theatres. My daughter’s job was to precede thè travelling actors to arrange for permits, theatres, hospitality, and more importantly thè necessary powerful spotlights, putting up posters on bill boards, coping with thè electrical and thè ticket-takers unions, thè dressing-room staff, thè ice cream and coke vendors, and heaven knows what other obstacles that only Italy can so effectively throw up. I lost my shirt backing this program but thoroughly loved attending thè final show in every town, so proud of my young people’s performance after thè month of strenuous rehearsals, of making costumes and stage-sets, and then travelling to thè next theatre. I particularly remember thè fun of strolling down thè main Street of Taormina in Sicily en route to thè magnifìcent amphiteatre overlooking thè bay and Mt. Etna, with a full moon touching everything with shining brilliance. The actors had to dress in thè hotel as there were no suitable dressing rooms in thè partial ruins. The leading man took me on his arm as thè cast followed us, doing part of their action and playing up to thè crowd as we paraded to thè theatre. It was reai Commedia dell’Arte with everyone laughing, singing, and dancing as though a circus had come into town.

My daughters Lynn and Gai ready to head off for Sicily to set up thè theatre tour

Celebrating after thè performance

"I lost my shirt backing this program, but thoroughly loved attend­ ing thè final show in every town”—here with Fiorentine drama critic Emilio Poesio

43


T H I R T I E S

Lynn with her two children Adrien and Anna in Virginia

This same daughter rcstored a 12th-century farm house in Italy, supposedly as my retirement home (but I gave up thè idea of retiring), restored thè Georgian houses that make up thè campus of TASIS England, bought and dis— mantled four log cabins in Virginia, hauled them 200 miles and reconstructed them into charming, rustically elegant homes, moved a large colonial house 300 miles by pulling it msm

Wf ! 4M

"My elder daughter, Gai, is off in thè Philip­ pines with her family building houses for thè homeless..Her daughter Daniella is in thè center

44

Gai is happy because she is serving

down and loading it onto two forty-five foot trailers and putting it together again in thè foothills of thè Blue Ridge Mountains. She also learned to fly and did a parachute jump just to prove she could. Not to be outdone, my clder daughter, Gai, is off in thè Philippines building houses for thè homeless with “Habitat for Humanity”. Habitat is a Christian organization whose motto is “No more shacks.” They are building houses for thè homeless in many different parts of thè world. My daughter is based near Manila right in thè center of a project to build 150 houses on a piece of land in Kamarin, near Novaliches. With two-and-a-half million Filipinos living under a piece of corrugated metal outside a wire fence that protects thè luxurious suburban homes, her and her husband’s effort is hardly a scratch on thè surface. But her conviction is strong that if enough in­ dividuate do something to help, miracles can be accomplished, and Habitat does work miracles. Living on $700 a month with her husband and three children, she is happy because she is serving. I am very proud of her and feel selfish and spoiled when I rcalize I could not do what she is doing, yet recognize how desperately thè world needs many souls like my elder daughter.


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__I had not been a politicai animai and I wasn’t sujjìciently amare of international problems and our foreign policies until thè war broke out in Europe in ‘39. I mas very amare of it then, because by that tinte I had travelled in Europe a great deal and had become a strong Francophile. So, during thè mar I morked hard for thè Free French—me gave benefits, and sent money over to De Gaulle, trying to support thè fighi for a free France.

/o re &fi«r/y

INAMUM fLOOR

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Mary Lyon schoolgirls stage floor show for Philadelphia socialites In thC "Balle! Militaire" thè uirl-* <inll«-d xinartly in brighi rrd jackel*, vinte plratrd akirU and IkjoI». Latcr thrv vere

joined iti a grand linai»- l»v frani itciglthoring IVntwylvniiia MiUlar}’(’ol!cp:.Tbcinusicwwhy Princeton ^Tigtr*.”

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46

he Mary I.voii ScIhmiI at Swnrlhmorv. I’a. Im«an cnmllmeiit of oiily 1»7 K«rU. Imt few lur^cr m-1i««o|s colliri bave •dagl'»! «> u»kmI n «diow «•» tilt* olir thown un tlicx* pnuc-*. ( )n Fri<ln> . Nuv. 11. !•> iiniiMinlly prettv Mary Lyon girl-, all of liigli-xiiool or jui»ior-<*»*lIcgc a«c. put ori a Ittivnct floor idum» part of a par­ ty gì veti hv the jciioul'ft "CYrric FranrnU.’’ or FrrntTi

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The waltznumber u rutile uKlknce * favoriti "l'i.r »ru.i, n' » m ..! tJicM- nnd all other ermlumt» thcinvlve* nn«l made nini paintol


F O R T I E S I loved Europe. I had my year in Switzerland, which gave me French Jlueticy. I majored in French in college and had some wonderful professors. Unfortunately, 1 wasn’t allowed to spend my Junior Year in Europe, which 1 wanted to do, because in those days Harvard would not recognize credits from any other place but Harvard. Happily they bave now changed that policy.

y-ì &

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f11 «»f ( ìftirr«l<)r(aullr'» Krrr Frrmh. IV arhuol. indmlii* Wil.ld.fT Junior Collrgr. «Ini» « ian> iti iN «t u«lmt« front nrarliy I1uliulrl|iliii ami iUitIm

tome <*tccpt for beri Ir*« ali pprr*. TV re mrr «alt/. tati-

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(Hi Sai urlai ni£hl. Mary I.Uifi’» ViHllif Itmtrur»

tif. Urlami ulinwi, tlir viiituM ami attuimi* atr mi|u

.|.-ìnrfn| tlirv Inni a tuli mtlt uf M >*!» à.*» fruì» t««»

llrlatKr* ami Dii la«lrl pitia Mrialilrt

la-rat tallio funi uj» lihc tino** in Carotar» mintali

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irnll» lUlnl tu tlic party. Tlirv *aw tuo «limo, >1

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tur. «Ini «imi tu «av "

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nip|>cr to D1UMC furutahnl l»v an «'reati ira t uni nitidi

tmicliol.** Fufothrfa «Imi aro- tuia lini. turn t V pai:**-

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li tli felini iiaber, to Vni.i.nc tur»

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«ith tlir mi* rc|«TramIme radi «mipinl nmntrj •<( Furiar.

Dedicateti to... Mary Crist Fleming

THANK YOU, DEAR GOD, FOR A PERSON WHO KNOWS YOUR DAY FROM NIGHT, WHO IN THIS WORLD OF

•fjjfàà

SHADOWS SEES LIFE IN ITS TRUE LIGHT. AND GRANT SHE WALKS FOREVER WITHOUT

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REPROACH OR FEAR, PLEASE KEEP HER

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ALWAYS AS SHE IS, DIRECT, STEADFAST, SINCERE. (From The Lyoness, The Mary Lyon Junior College Yearbook, 1943)

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F O R T I E S

The United States Navy took over my parents’ school during thè war in 1943. They commandeered thè school, though they didn’t actually purchase it, and we were evacuated. It became a convalescent hospital for offìcers convalescing from thè war at thè Fourth Naval District, which was thè Philadelphia Navy Yard. My father moved thè school to thè Barbizon Plaza Hotel in New York City, to finish thè academic year. Utilike most owners or headmasters, he felt an obligation to fuljìll thè school’s contract, which was to bring thè students to thè end of thè academic year and to graduate those students who should graduate. My father took a terrible loss financially because putting 120 students in thè Barbizon Plaza in war time, even though they gave us thè two top foors and we put four students in a room, was very expensive and thè parents were not asked to pay any more. A lot of schools simply said that thè United States Government had taken over their property and closed them down. Eventually, after thè war, Swarthmore College bought thè property that my father had built up in Swarthmore, so we never re-opened there. At thè end of thè year at thè Barbizon Plaza we closed thè school, because we couldn’t keep running a school in a New York hotel and thè contract to thè students had been fulfilled. During thè Second World War, of course, Americans weren’t allowed overseas, so my love of Europe had to be temporarily forgotten. After thè Navy took over Mary Lyon and we closed thè school at thè Barbizon Plaza, my husband and I bought a fami called Frog Hollow Farm in Pennsylvania and we lived there during thè last two years of thè war. One weekend I had a visitfrom a dearfriend, Nina Berkley, who had been with Harpers Bazaar, and she said, “Cris, I know you well enough to know that you are not going to stay out of mischieffor very long. Something that is badly needed is a summer camp for small children, because people in New York, professional people, want their children out of thè city for thè summer, but they are continuing to work and so must stay in town”. That is when I first met Luise Rainer, because she sent her six-year old daughter to me. I had thè children of Arlene Frances, and Milton Berle, and other T.V. personalities of thè time. The camp was immediately successful and my own children were thè sanie age, so it worked out well in terms of their learning to swim, play tennis, and be with other children. It was a beautiful farm with a swimming pool, tennis court, a wooded area, pony and cart, a ferris wheel and slides. My wonderful father built two log cabins down in thè woods for thè boys; he built them with his own hands. Our house had a big sleeping porch which held ten children, and there was a small cottage. Very soon we had a camp offifty children from New York.

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FIRST GI.IMPSE OF THE FARMHOUSE

48

In thè heakt of Pcnnsylvania’s rolling, well-kept farmland is Frog Hollow Farm—a proverbially charming hundred-year-old Ducch farmhouse, with decply recessed windqws, thick walls for summer coolness and winter warmth, a massive fìreplacc, and all thè atmosphere traditionally associated with such a thoroughly American homestead. The farm, aside from thè tilled acreage, consists of thè originai house, dating back to. 1826 but completely modernized, a large well-built barn, a cottage, two cabins, thè old springhouse, a tennis court, swimming pool and bathhouse. The location and equipment of Frog Hollow seemed too ideal not to be shared. The owners consequently opened thè facilities of their dwelling and its beautiful surroundings as a summer camp for small children—boys and girls from three to nine years of age. Frog Hollow is situated eight miles from Norristown, Pennsylvania, and twelve miles from Doylestown. By train from New York a passenger must change from thè North Philadelphia station of thè Pennsylvania railroad to thè North Broad Street station of thè Reading Railroad. 3


F O R T I E S

Awaiting thè children

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F O R T I E S

All ready for our pony ride

There was also a very large country barn at Frog Hollow, which again my dear father, at age 69, had just completely repainted. I had installed a theatre in thè hayloft, classrooms for an elementary school in thè bottoni portion, and a large bowed bay window in thè front classroom. I had just fdled thè window with geraniums thè night before Thanksgiving so that thè flowers would greet thè children thè following Monday morning. What bad luck that Thanksgiving morning—thè neudy installed heating System caught fire and set thè whole barn afame. Happily we got thè pony and thè station wagon out before it burnt to thè ground. There was to be a parade of all thè fire companies in thè area that day in Norristown so their trucks were all shined, with brass glimmering and thè men infullfresh uniforms. Unfortunately for them, they had to rush to my fire. I had at least six companies fighting thè blaze, but it was hopeless, thè barn being of wood construction. They left for thè parade all smudged and bedraggled and I stood weeping among thè ashes for all thè work my father had done and for thè bay window and thè geraniums that thè children would tiever see. The fire companies had cordonned off thè road, but a wonderful grandmother, whose two grandchildren were with me, got through in her chauffeur-driven car to teli me that her husband, a prominent lawyer, William Clarke Mason, then head of thè American Bar Association, had sent her to teli me that no matter what it cost I must immediately start rebuilding to continue my work in education. That was all thè encouragement I needed and thè men started that Monday to create a new and much better school building in two months time. Incidentally, I also got thè 30 pound turkey, as well as thè pony, out of thè barn before it collapsed and thè guests arrived as invited at one o’clock, so that twenty of us stili sat down to Thanksgiving Dinner!....

TWO MEN LOOKED

“Our barn after thè

OUT FROM PRISON

fire; my father had just

BARS /

completely repainted it.”

ONE SAW MUD AND ONE SAW

STARS.

“Our new school building after thè tire”

50


F O R T I E S

S ff-, V-Aw '

jM My wonderful dad with little girl Gay

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Frog Hollow Farm: Cris Fleming, her staff and all her children

Travels Down Frog Hollow Lane We met because of Voglie Magazine and then remarkable good fortune took over. During thè war my mother was leafìng through thè magazine in a doctor’s waiting room, sensing thè impending heat, noise, and soot of thè New York summer that was pressing in thè open Windows. An ad caught her eye: ”Frog Hollow Farm, A Camp for Young Children, Landsdale, Pennsylvania.” Suddenly, thè notion that I might be self-possessed enough to go away to camp swept over her. When thè brilliant yellow brochure arrived, it sounded like paradise. The term “young children” meant a rather fluid age group, defined on thè older end by Gai’s age and on thè younger end by Lynn’s age. Thus, my brother Wally, who is Lynn’s contemporary, began summer camp just before his second birthday. Looking back on those glorious summers, even thè tiniest child knew where Mrs. Fleming’s priorities lay, what she liked, and what she did not tolerate. She devoted as much time and energy to creating and maintaining a beautiful and picturesque set-

ting for us as she does today for older students. I vividly remember thè rolling and manicured lawns and thè huge swimming pool, which was thè scene of many an extravaganza for parents’ visiting day. Her father built two cabins in thè woods next to a gurgling stream for thè “older boys” (older than 5) which were guarded by a totem pole (perhaps an early ancestor of today’s putti). Older girls lived in a quaint cottage. The Farm also included a tennis court, barn with hay loft (which bumed to thè ground—but that’s another story), and thè best tree house in a wonderful old appiè tree. There was no linoleum, lots of red, a Constant supply of rubber ice buckets, uniforms (white on Sunday), and as thè decade progressed, more decorative black wrought iron. Of course, there was thè archetypal convertible parked out front. There was no such thing as a “regular day” at Frog Hollow. Mrs. Fleming devoted effort and energy to making each day memorable and special for us tots. She was determined to give parents their moneys’ worth, and so quality,

51


F O R T I E S

quality, quality was everywhere. It will come as no surprise that Mrs. Flemings’ preferred style of dining was “al fresco,” so there needed to be several different venues at Frog Hollow to accommodate thè large numbers of picnics and cookouts to satisfy this passion. And even in those war and post-war years thè drinks were always cold, even for thè kids. The field trips we took to “interesting sites” around thè area were determined by how far we could drive before children started getting carsick. Valley Forge, thè Delaware Water Gap, Theatre in thè Round at New Hope, thè Poconos, were all places Mrs. Fleming thought our parents would expect us to visit. We did, but we made equally memorable trips to drivein-movies (16 kids in thè backseat), bumper cars at a locai amusement park, and an indoor roller rink with organ music. Every Saturday night we had movies in thè hayloft (no easy feat to lug thè projector up thè ladder to thè loft with thè plug yards away, but more of “an event” than sitting on chairs in a room), and “Knickerbocker Holiday” was a perennial choice. Mrs. Fleming’s flair for theatre and her passion for drama was everywhere evident, and I suspect we kept thè crepe paper industry alive during those lean times. As “Babes in Toyland” blasted from thè victrola, Gai and I with giant paper water lilies taped to our heads, gave performances worthy of Esther Williams’ at thè annual water Mrs. Fleming wading with Tom and Lynn

“The swimming pool was thè scene for many an extravaganza”

52


F O R T I E S

camival, while even thè tiniest child in red and white stripes doggy paddled to “The Teddy Bears Picnic.” It was an extravaganza in thè great style of Sol Hurok. And who could forget our classic production of “Rose Marie,” mouthing thè “Indian Love Cali” in perfect sync to an ancient and scratchy record of Gertrude Lawrence. Not taking any chances, Mrs. Fleming fortifìed our parents (thè enraptured and perspiring audience), with frequent trips to her bedroom, where—no surprise to any of you —she had a seemingly endless supply of gin and tonics, and an astonishing supply of ice to go with them. I have many a fond memory of my father boarding thè famous convertible for thè trip back to thè Landsdale Train Station, a full glass in hand. How he loved to teli and retell stories about parents’ visiting day at Frog Hollow! Through several summers I was thè most ecstatic participant at Frog Hollow, and each year I contrived to stay longer and longer. And who of you will be surprised to leam that it was Mrs. Fleming herself who begged our parents to let us stay a little longer or arrive a little earlier. Her immense capacity for generosity and hospitality extended most particularly to us children. By then Mrs. Fleming was a single parent with three young children—a handful in itself—and yet she reached out to include many of us in her extended family. The youngest ones she bedded down in cribs next to her bedroom and shared her bathroom with diapers and assorted baby paraphemalia. The cast of characters stili dance through my head. “Grand Dad,” Jim Elford, Guy Tolman, George Clark, Hinny and Jill Newman, Johnny Yomoko, thè Coles family, Crousie, Spottie, William, and Mary thè Pony. There was red haired Ingrid Russell and sophisticated Ann Shoefeld (age 5), both of whom I see to this day. As I look back over nearly five decades I am keenly aware that of all those children Mrs. Fleming “adopted,” I am especially blessed because our special relarionship has endured. Again I believe great good fortune intervened in a particular way. My first year at Frog Hollow Gai and I became great friends. Mrs. Fleming not only encouraged our friendship, but she made it possible for me to spend every available minute out of school with thè Fleming family. Thus I recali sharing Gai’s traumatic moments— her annoyance when Lynn was bom, and thè crisis of her hospitalization and recuperation when her appendix burst. I have shared so many rooms with Gai from our first bunkbed

l’m thè “happy" king

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Gai and I became great friends

"We were inseparable” —Gai and I perform with Jean Gardner at Swiss Holiday

53


F O R T I E S in thè cottage in 1944 to her frilly blue organza room in thè main house in thè early 1950s. “Through thè eyes of a child who found it all so wonderful”

Waiting on Mrs. Fleming for Lynn’s wedding

54

___

____

Once in Europe, we were inseparable through summers in Villa Verbanella, thè house in Ascona, Loreto, Montagnola, Capitignano, and countless pup tents from thè Costa Brava to thè Dalmatian Coast. The physical closeness first to Gai and then to Lynn made me feel in every sense “that other daughter.” It is Mrs. Fleming’s genius to make each of us, her devoted friends, seem very important in her life, a rare gift that her daughters share with her. But throughout my life, she has given more to me than even a daughter has a right to expect. I have a gold-linked bracelet inscribed with thè legend “Best Camper, Frog Hollow Camp, 1950.” I wore that bracelet for years. I went from being a homesick and timid child to being, apparently, thè “Best Camper.” I remember stretching to meet those early expectations, and in doing so I became thè person Mrs. Fleming imagined for me. Whatever she deemed possible for me to do or accomplish I somehow did— and soon it no longer occurred to me to doubt that I could. Mrs. Fleming thought I was “artistic” and put a brush in my hand. She told everyone I was a great swimmer when in fact I was terrified of thè water and I became a good swimmer. She said she recognized leadership and assigned me a raggle taggle of children to look after—I’ve been leading raggle taggle children ever since. Forty years after thè date on my bracelet 1 sit surrounded by a collection of five decades of photographs. The effect on me is overwhelming and I am inadequate to thè task. There are too many riotous stories, too many adventures and crises, too many poignant moments, too many shared confidences, too many miles travelled and memorable meals taken together to capture in a volume that I am expected to share with a host of other writers who are equally devoted to Mrs. Fleming. I realize that thè seeds of my profound appreciation were well planted and nurtured in me at Frog Hollow, and while so much has changed in Mrs. Fleming’s life, I now perceive how much has stayed thè same. I know that most of thè other contributors to this book will recali events that have happened since thè years at Frog Hollow, and from thè perspective of an adult. Looking through Mrs. Fleming’s 70th Birthday Book I recognize every experience and characteristic that each friend described and I celebrate all of them with love and affecdon. I offer a glimpse of a time when few of you knew Mrs. Fleming, and my recollections are through thè eyes of a child who found it all


F O R T I E S

so wonderful. That sense of enchantment has continued now for almost fifty years, and that friendship remains a most treasured possession. I will never tire of watching thè effect Mrs. Fleming has on people when they meet her for thè fìrst rime. At 80, she condnues to collect countless admirers and friends of all ages. What a lady! What a life! How lucky to have been such a part of it! Betsy Bacon Newell New York City and Oxford Former camper, Frog Hollow Farm, Counselor, Swiss Holiday, U.S. Representative, TASIS Betsy with alumnus Donald MacDermid

Keep Order

and Lynn

A Viennese psychiatrist parent was visiting Frog Hollow Farm. On being caught lining up thè jumble of children’s shoes in thè hall, Cris Fleming apologized with embarrassment. The doctor in his Austrian accent said there was no need to apologize and proceded to recite what became one of my mother’s favorite quotations: Keep order in space, And order in time, For disorder is chaos, And chaos is crime. Editor

55


56


N I N E T E E N

F I F T I E S

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s — In a sense I suppose it was Nina Berkley who really started me off on my educational life. I had, of course, been in education in my parents’ school as an assistant, but it was Nina who gave me thè idea of thè summer camp and that in turn went into a winter program at thè fami, always for striali children, and then it wetit frotn a winter program to my first summer program in Europe in 1954. You might say it started thè ball rolling in terms of thè idea of going back to Europe. Also it must bave been in my blood stream because I bave never knoum anything but education. My parents were both educators, all my uncles and gratidparents were either lawyers, teachers, ministers or missionaries. I was far more interested in thè theatre, in music, and in drama, but of course that all helps with education. Surely otte has to bave some sense of interaction with thè public, with people, in order to be in education. In a way my oum children are also largely responsible, because I wanted them to be educated partly in Europe. I wanted them to learn languages, and seeing what happened to them, I realized thè experience should be shared with other children. Education is Service and I believe we are put on this earth to make some contribution, to try to leave it a little better place than we found it. Also, from early childhood, because I loved languages, I thought that human communication was terribly important. One enjoys living in a country, or just travelling in a country, ten times as much if you speak thè language of thè people. That’s why I brought my children to Europe and put them in schools here. From that grew my own school because I wanted to tie thè American curriculum in with what they learned in Europe and in foreign languages. They had to bave an American curriculum in order to return to college in thè States. Jim Elford keeps an eye on spell-bound children, Tom, Gay, Johnny, Guy, Lynn, and friends

%

However humble THE PLACE I MAY HOLD,/ ON THE LONELY PATHS I HAVE TROD,/ THERE’S A CHILD WHO PLACES HIS FAITH IN ME,/ THERE’S A DOG WHO THINKS I’M GOD.

58

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F I F T I E S

Cris Fleming presents diplomas at a Frog Flollow Country Day School graduation to Guy Tolman, daughter Gay, and Johnny Yomoko

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A rare photo of me on skis—thè one and only time I went skiing with my children I panicked and couldn’t go any further, so I hitched a ride up thè ski lift to thè comfort of thè ski lodge on a ski instructor’s shoulders

My own three children Gai, Lynn, and Tom

59


F I F T I E S Unfortunately, thè first summer in Europe with twenty-five children was an unhappy one because one of thè children that I had brought over was stricken with polio thè first day after he arrived. I had thought that was one problem that by moving to Europe I would avoid. A lot of camps in thè States, before thè Salk vaccine, were having problems, having cases of polio, even having children die during a summer period. Imagine thè shock thè second morning to wake up and find this boy was paralyzed from thè waist down. He was thè son of General and Mrs. Jacquard Rothschild. I was very surprised when thè Rothschilds enrolled their son because thè General had been on thè generai staff in Tokyo at thè signing of thè armistice with Japan and their own daughter had been raped and murdered by an American orderly when she was only 9. It was a tragic situation. I had read about it in thè newspapers, but I never thought, when I moved to Switzerland, they would let their only remaining child gofurther than their back yard. 1 wrote to them saying I was surprised that they would let their son go to Switzerland after their terrible tragedy. They wrote back and said, Mrs. Fleming, if you went to Siberia, we would let Ronny go with you. It would be Ronny who woke up with polio, so you can imagine my feelings. The General was in thè Walter Reed hospital in Washington for an operation and Mrs. Rothschild was on a emise in Norway with her mother. I remember Mrs. Rothschild arriving at thè Lausanne station from Norway, at three in thè morning. Of course, I was on thè station platform to meet her, and she said, “Mrs. Fleming, is he dead?” In those days polio was quite often fatai, and I replied, “No, he’s in thè quarantine hospital.” And we went up and broke into his room at that time of night. He stayed in thè hospital in Switzerland for a long time and visited many other hospitals, including thè Mayo, where thè doctors held out very little hope of Ron ever walking again. With thè extraordinary determination of mother and son and endless massages, Ron was completely cured, thank God, and became a runner. Needless to say, Phyllis Rothschild, thè General, and I became fast friends through this very dose association. It was not a very happy summer for me with this near tragedy. I was running back and forth to thè hospital and was having difficulties in getting a decent cook. I had several young counselors from my camp in America, but I really wasn’t organized. It was hard tofnd a big chalet with enough beds and tofnd a cook in high tourist season. I was a bit naive and I hadn’t ready expected thè response of 25families. I thought I might have only ten or twelve children. It was also thè summer I was getting a divorcefrom my second husband. That was thè first summer in Switzerland and not a very happy one__ Proud parents Jac and Phyllis Rothschild beam on their son Ron. Daughter Gay is in between and Mrs. Fleming is shepherding her first group of young people for thè flight to Switzerland

60


F I F T I E S

r r

“Frog Hollow in Switzerland'’—last photo before boarding

HERE WE GO!

thè piane at “Idlewild” —June 22nd, 1955

Off to t/x Fairy-Tale Land of Smtzerland After teii years of camping in thè pleasant Pennsylvania countryside Frog Hollow is going to enrich its program with a holiday in thè lovely mountains and lakes of Switzerland. No locality in Europe seemed comparatile in beauty, inspiration and abundant good living to Montreux on thè beautiful lake of Geneva. It is here that Frog Hollow will spend this summer. Rather than thè old farmhouse in thè hollow and thè cabins in thè woods Frog Hollow this year will ha ve a chalet on a sunny hillside to shelter thè children; rather than thè swimming pool this year’s campers will have thè clear water of Lac Leman for not only continued instruction in swimming but also thè added delight of boating and sailing. There will be hikes, picnics, bicycle trips and ovemights in thè green foothills below thè summits of thè sky-high, snow-capped Alps. Conveniently located dose to funiculars and train Service there will be many excursions to magnificently beautiful Zermatt, Interlaken and to medieval towns full of enchantment and old folk-lore. French will be thè language and thè days will be packed with thè neh experiences of living and playing among children of another nation. The group will fly straight to Geneva via Swissair June 22 at 12:30 P.M. from Idlewild Airport. The tuition, all inclusive, is $675.00 for boys and girls 6 to 12 and $975.00 for boys and girls 12 to 15 years of age. A registration fee of $100.00 is applicable against tuition. Dr. Georges Buchheim of Montreux will be thè camp doctor. Montreux has an excellent hospital and Lausanne and Geneva are famous European medicai centers. Camp health blanks must be filled in by a physician by June 15 and accompanied by a vaccination certificate. Clothing requirements are simple. A detailed list of needed items will be sent upon registration. Mary Fleming Christman, leader of thè group and director of Frog Hollow, was educated in Europe, headed college groups there for five summers and is just retumed from two winters in France and Switzerland with her children.

DO

FROG HOLLOW’S SWISS HOLIDAY

61


F I F T I E

s

Should I Give It Up? Alary Crist Fleming certainly does not act her age. She is one of those people who never stops but develops new ideas thè older she gets. A memorable meeting I remember very clearly was thè summer she ran her fìrst Swiss camp in a chalet in Gryon, near Villars. She was quite discouraged and doubtful that her school would succeed. She asked me: “Use,

what do you think, should I give it up?” My response was “can you afford to keep it for another year?” and she said: “Yes.” That year was thè turning point when TASIS really took off. The rest is legend, as we all know. lise Nelson New York City

My Mother Has a Phobia about Trains

Half of knowing

WHAT YOU WANT OUT OF LIFE IS KNOWING WHAT YOU HAVE TO UP

GIVE

TO GET IT.

... .and I have given up trying to persuade her to take them anymore. I once persuaded her to take thè New York to Philadelphia train rather than drive, when we were traveUing for aiutimi reunions in America. Of all times and of all places, there was a bomb threat on our train, so we had to disembark and wait for a lengthy, careful search of thè train. Another time I persuaded mother to take a train from Egham, Surrey, to I-forget-where in thè English countryside. On pulling in at our destination, for thè life of us we couldn’t open thè train door to get out. So thè train slowly pulled out, much to our frustration and disgust. Some kind Englishman bemusedly and patiently explained that at thè next stop we should open thè window, reach out and down and open thè door from thè outside. Why of course! How else do you get out of a train? I think my mother’s reai phobia, reinforced as it is every time she travels on a train, is from thè unscheduled New York to Washington train that “never should have run.” It is on this ride

A visit from granddad and Aunt Harriet while we were in Aix-enProvence as a family

t

62

that she met her future second husband, who pursued her until she married him, even by appearing on thè “Ile de France” after it had pulled out of New York harbor. My mother and we three children had set sail for a year of living and studying in France. The appearance of this uninvited guest caused great consternation in our family ranks, and was especially upsetting to my sister Gai. She, my brother, and I were looking forward to a year in France alone with our mother. As my mother tells later, she never would have married John Christman if her father had been with her and had continued living on thè farm with our family. The end of this second and last marriage carne on another ocean Crossing with thè encouragement of my mother’s friend Luise Rainer Knittel, as one sees from thè vignette that follows in this volume. My mother’s wisdom and judgment in others’ relationships, as opposed to her own unfortunate marriages, carne to thè fore when Granddad announced he was planning on marrying lady so-and-so. This was many years after thè long, painful death of my grandmother, and he had been living with us on thè farm. Mother just “knew” this woman was a gold bricker and would not make her father happy. So my mother quietly took thè lady aside and mentioned that any money or possessions he owned were now in her name. A little over a week later thè ever-hopeful lady was betrothed to another, less-suspecting or “protected” gentleman. Then mother suggested Granddad cali on Harriet Kistler, who had lost her husband several years before. She and Dr. Kistler had been very dose friends of my mother’s father and mother from thè moment they arrived in Swarthmore with a baby in 1910. Dr. Kistler attended to a very sick and


F I F T I E S

frail woman and little baby and had commented to his wife Harriet how very sick Mrs. Frances Crist was. The birth of Mary Leavitt Crist had been an ordeal for her mother, and thè “mold was broken” after that. Sometimes I think of my mother springing Hke Athena fullgrown and in full armor from thè head of Zeus. She is “sui generis,” ‘virgin’ goddess, protector of civiUzed life. My beloved grandfather, Haldy Miller Crist, and Harriet Kistler had a wonderful marriage in their late 70s. Harriet had some fiery Irish blood in her, a change from Frances Leavitt Crist’s more puritanical view of life. She had a reai twinkle in her eye, and I remember her saying to my mother on visiting our family in Tuscany years after my grandfather’s death, “Mary, he was quite a man, qui te a man, to thè very end!” Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia My wonderful granddad and Aunt Harriet looked after us (Tom, Gay, and

One Mistake I Did Make

me) in thè Vaud one spring, while mother

An incident in my life with you: My darling Cris with thè most generous heart! black dress—one shoulder free! Oh yes, we know each other and found each other again on a big ocean liner, both leaving one country to go to another; you with three kids and two dogs, I with two dogs and one kid— mid-sea, mid-air, high spirits! “That one mistake I ever made”—yes, so you said—”That fellow! Thank goodness I left him behind! But I am married, so what can I do?” mid-sea, mid-air, high spirits! “Give me that ring”, I said, “that formerly seemed so holy, but has tarnished ever so badly!” And so you did. And, lo and behold, that ring took wings in my hand, flew high into thè wind, then deep into thè bottom of thè sea. “Not just a symbol this, but that’s what you must do!” And there you laughed your wonderfully hearty laugh. ”How right you are”, you generously declared. Hardly able to wait until on land again, you rid yourself of that one mistake. And you were free and happy ever after! Which was [and stili is] thè solution for when you need not be a stern teacher—you can also free thè other shoulder!

My darling Cris! With love, And this on your eightieth birthday.

returned to thè States to prepare for Frog Hollow

Luise Rainer Knittel Vico Morcote, Switzerland Alumni parent, Frog Hollow Farm Robert t and Luise Knittel visit Cris at Capitignano

Cris Fleming with "one shoulder free"

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F I F T I E S

.... Eventually I wrote to a very dear friend of mine, Gordon McCouch, an artist I had met on a trans-Atlantic Crossing. He was a pointer who lived in Ascona and so, after thè ugly experience of thè Villars summer wore off, I wrote to him and said I had a very bad experience in Switzerland, and thè only way I would think of coming back would be if he could find me a place in thè Italian-lake part of Switzerland. I had remembered visiting him in Locamo and how beautiful it was. Sure enough, he carne up with my first villa, had even engaged a cook and a maid, and made arrangements on thè lake for a boat and a boatman. I was looking forward to thanking him, but unfortunately he died about a month before I carne over. The Villa proved to be in a beautiful spot, and in fact it was there, when I arrived, that I said this is so beautiful I must bave a school bere. We actually stayed in that villa, thè Villa Verbanella, two years (1955 to 1957) because thè first year I had only twelve children including my own three. Then wejumped from twelve to thirty-fwe. I had a little house of my own for my children, but all on thè same property. Then I rented another house which belonged to thè owner of thè big house’s sister, but with thirty-fwe students it was stretched. When thè third year’s number jumped to fifty, I moved to Lugano. I tried to find a larger property in Locamo, because I loved that part of thè world. In fact, we liked it much better than Lugano. But it’s been good fortune or destiny that we moved to Lugano because Locamo is a cul-de-sac on thè rail-road, not thè through line Lugano is, with its north/south axis ZurichLugano-Milan-Rome. It would bave been impossible for thè school to grow if we had remained in Locamo__ Villa Verbanella overlooks Lago Maggiore, a beautiful spot to start a school ■1

SjSjSi

At-\ Mf -

.

VSf.'T

Srfe C .. •

■ rii

,-fiT

She Did Save Me From an Overly Attentive Counselor ...My first meeting with Mrs. Fleming was in 1956 when in Europe with my family—she wanted me to stay at thè school for thè remainder of thè summer instead of continuing our tour. I was whisked away—but returned thè next summer and a few after that. She did save me from an overly attentive senior counselor one year—his name escapes me—but he had gone well beyond flowers and candy—a reai lifesaver that I no longer had trips in thè VW bus with him! I suppose thè most lasting impressions of Mrs. Fleming are her energy, enthusiasm and power to motivate people—to inspire people into trying things they might otherwise not

64

have thè opportunity to try, and most important to me (at that stage of life) was to trust their judgement and instili a sense of responsibility for task, school and even country — I remember her house in Montagnola, Rosaria’s breakfasts, moving thè library from Lugano up thè mountain and trying to reorganize it. There are many funny trip stories__ A special hello to Mrs. Fleming. Love, Patti Richards Cosgrave Haverford, Pennsylvania Former camper and counselor, Swiss Holiday


F I F T I E S

Best Thing She Did Was Push Me Out of thè Nest Cris Fleming certainly figured strongly in my life and that of my family. She took me on at Swiss Holiday as a refugee on two occasions, and thè best thing she did was push me out of thè nest (hers!). What a burden I was to her, yet she was marvelously kind and generous to me, when I only faintly understood what was going on around me. I was qualified for nothing, but she helped me begin thè road to self-respect and standing on my own feet. What a drag it must

have been for her. And I wasn’t even her own nestling. I am grateful to her for giving me thè boot, and being a friend for so many years after—33 to be exact—to this day, across so many countries. Love, Anne Phelan McCloskey Chevy Chase, Maryland Former counselor, Swiss Holiday

How to Start a School Ima woman with no patience and I can’t stand to read instructions. So I never do. On one occasion when I was driving on thè Italian autostrada from Florence to Lugano, where thè first TASIS school is located, my car broke down. I walked a few meters to thè nearest S.O.S. telephone box. There were three buttons—blue, green, and red, with, of course, instructions. But not liking to read instructions and thinking, “what pretty colors!”, I pushed all three buttons! Lo and behold within not many minutes thè ACI repair truck arrived— and then closely following it an ambulance! Not far behind, not much later carne thè sirens of a fìre truck!! What splendid Service I thought— and when they asked me, “Che c’è, Signora?”— What’s wrong? I said, “I don’t know—that’s why I called you!” Happily I remembered that, travelling long distances as I often do between schools, I always carry a drinking kit—so I resorted to it once they determined I was just out of gas—and offered them a choice of gin and tonic, scotch, or “Whiskey Americana,” my favorite sour mash, with salted nuts and cheese tidbits. Fifteen minutes later they drove away feeling less pain than before and thanking me for a very pleasant interlude! You’ll wonder why I teli this story. I do because over thè years several people have asked me “How do you start a school?” and I’m tcmpted to say like thè story I just recounted— you just start it. You push all thè buttons—and years later if you ever have time, which I’ve never had, you make a blue print of “How to start a School”! For me thè recipe is simple! Find a beautiful property, both house and surroundings—for

young people need and deserve to be surrounded with beauty. It’s like a security blanket that will always remain with them, no matter what thè rest of life may bring. Fili this setting with young people from all over thè world, because thè world has become so very small. Fili all their waking hours with commitment to study, sports, thè arts, and responsibility to others. Instruct—stretch them in all areas. They don’t know thè amazing potential they have! Place in this “house” very special human beings as teachers, friends, counselors, and role models, people who have a sense of thè excitement of life and leaming—of thè huge challenge this world presents, and above all, great faith in their young charges. Sprinkle and cover thè whole wonderful concoction, basting frequently with generous portions of T.L.C.—tender, loving care! Believe me, it’s a foolproof recipe! It’s also portable—it can be tested in any country, as indeed TASIS has done in Switzerland, England, Greece, and France. The beginning of TASIS may illustrate thè formula! I fled to Europe from thè USA 35 years ago to avoid thè Pennsylvania turnpike cutting through my summer camp for small children—a small camp I started because of my 3 small children. Sailing for France I arrived at Le Havre with 74 pieces of luggage to set up camp, 4 children, two mine and two borrowed, an MG-TC, a police dog, and a young counselor, Ted Linn, who had been with me at Frog Hollow Farm for a couple of summers. A Volkswagon bus awaited us on thè dock. When all this impedimenta was crammed into thè two vehicles, off we went to Locamo, Switzerland, where an

There

is a tide

IN THE AFFAIRS OF MEN/ WHICH, TAKEN AT THE FLOOD, LEADS ON TO FORTUNE;/ OMITTED, ALL THE VOYAGE OF OUR LIFE/ IS BOUND IN SHALLOWS AND IN MISERIES./ ON SUCH A FULL SEA ARE WE NOW AFLOAT/ AND WE MUST TAKE THE CURRENT WHEN IT SERVES,/ OR LOSE OUR VENTURES. Julius Caesar

65


F I F T I E S

artist friend had rented a villa for me—one I took sight unseen. After Crossing France, thè children were so eager to reach their summer base that they convinced me to cross thè Gotthard Pass at night, which meant that we reached thè villa at 3 a.m., they sleeping all thè way, of course, and I groggy from thè drive. The villa turned out to be beautiful, high on a hill, with a magnifìCris Fleming with Ted Linn in front of Villa Verbanella directing departure preparations for a Swiss Holiday trip

66

cent view over thè Swiss portion of Lago Maggiore, so magnificent, in fact, that I determined then and there—here there must be a school—a winter school. Thus Swiss Hohday began, and was indeed thè forerunner of all thè TASIS programs. Obviously it kept me running like a rabbit all summer, but I stili remembered my dream on thè night of arrivai and announced in August that The American School in Switzerland would open there on September lOth! Many parents said “impossible”—you carit open a school in a month, but I did, with 3 of my own, 3 day students, and six other students who begged to stay. Incredible as it now seems to me, their parents were foólish enough to let them! Those fìrst-year students stili claim it was a very special year in their lives. I had already hired 6 teachers so that for thè 12 students academics were strong right from thè start. I remember flying to Finland where my father was fishing to teli him that I was going to start a school in Switzerland. After all his advice as to why I shouldn’t and couldn’t possibly on such short notice, he gave me his blessing with thè words: “Mary, even if you have only your own three, stress academic ex-


F I F T I E S

First TASIS students:

■'Y

Vicki Thompson, John

l

Gage, Ellen Fairweather, Martin Vogt, Lynn Fleming, George Clark with math teacher Jim Elford

Teach each

f *t!

LESSON AS THOUGH IT WERE EQUAL TO THE WHOLE OF EDUCATION.

>4|RV

Posing for thè first TASIS brochure

Swiss Holidayersdining "al fresco" on thè terrace of Villa Verbanella

67


F I F T I E S

Mary Kay Fitch, member of first graduating class of TASIS, receives her diploma from Mrs. Fleming

First TASIS students: John Gage, Bruce Curtis, George Clark, Ellen Fairweather, and Gay Fleming celebrate Christmas in Barcelona with Cris Fleming

Cris Fleming with Bruce Curtis, John Gage, George Clark, and Tom and Gay gather for Christmas breakfast

68

cellence”, and, “If I were ten years younger I’d come and teach mathematics for you!” That first year my son, aged 13, an excellent but as yet unlicensed driver, drove me on several trips in thè MG to thè US embassies in Europe for me to announce to them this historical earth-shaking event—thè opening of The American School in Switzerland! Actually, as thè first American boarding school in Europe, it was more significant than I dreamed at thè time. As my son drove, I used a typewriter on my knees as, of course, I had no secretary, and there was mail to answer even though thè whole school file then fit into a 6-inch metal box! At Christmas time I threw thè whole school, that is I fit thè 9 students minus thè three day, into thè VW bus, added a Christmas tree in a bucket in case I couldn’t find one en route, and headed for Spain. Wc stopped in Avignon so I could buy a Santon creche for each student and reached Barcelona in time for Midnight Mass at thè Gaudi Cathedral, followed by champagne in my hotel bedroom and Christmas breakfast around our little tree, for which each one had made and hung a bauble. After that first year of 12 students in 1955-56, we jumped to 35 and had to annex a nearby house, but by thè third year 50 students were enrolled— far too many for thè Locamo campus. Where to go? No property in Locamo was large enough except thè Grand Hotel, which was far too large. At thè last minute, as I was accompanying my Swiss Holidayers to Zurich at thè dose of thè summer program, I was offered an abandoned, derelict, unfurnished villa in Lugano! I grabbed it, of course, and rushed back from Zurich to try to get it ready in three weeks time to receive 50 students. In so doing I somehow overlooked thè need for a kitchen and dining room and had to take thè whole school to a restaurant for thè first two weeks. I also discovered there was only room for 30 students to sleep, so 20 were moved into a small hotel due to dose November lst. I had no choice but to build 2 prefab dormitories in thè lower garden. Since at that time women didn’t even have thè vote in Switzerland, thè president of thè Swiss bank was so scandalized by a woman— American, and crazy enough to erect 2 pavilions in 3 weeks with no money—that of course he said no to any request for a loan. Happily thè contractors and merchants were remarkably


F I F T I E S

trusting, helpful, and intrigued with thè whole crazy operation, so somehow all got done! By Christmas time of this third year and with thè building project, I naturally ran out of tuition money and Walter Winiger, a young clerk from a Swiss bank that I hired two evenings a week to keep thè school books, warned me that I was going bankrupt. “You simply can’t make it past Christmas,” he said. To which I replied, “Young man, there is no such word as ‘can’t’ in my vocabulary, and if you use it you cannot work for me! How much money do you need?” I asked. So off I went to thè States over Christmas to borrow thè needed amount and to his amazement returned with it in January. He stayed with me over 20 years and through many more near bankruptcies! Lest you fear you’re in for a blow-by-blow account of thè whole history of TASIS, suffìce it to mention that in addition to TASIS being in several countries I will bare my soul and adrhit that TASIS has opened and closed more programs than probably any other institution. You may say this is because I don’t read instructions! Especially if they’re in Greek! Or because I don’t believe them if I do read them, especially market research documents when they teli me I shouldn’t do something that I want and intend to do anyway!! More accurately, it’s because I’ve been guilty of that ugly, unforgivable status of an independent private school that remains proprietary, a supposedly forbidden word in education! TASIS has a Foundation, but thè School is not a Foundation. After thè founding of Fleming College in Lugano and transferring it into a non-profit corporation with a Board of Trustees, which made it fair game for a revolution in 1969 and thus loss of control, I closed thè College and gave up that form of institution, never again to follow that formula! Most important of all, thè status of freedom and independence for TASIS allows us to take a stand on both skills and values, and that to me is what education is all about—not only thè absorption of pure facts, as important as many of them are, but thè teaching of values and thè transmission of high levels of skill. For it is on thè issues of values and skills that our present public education is floundering and indeed foundering. This makes us stili a nation at risk even though alarms went off six years ago warning us that as a nation we could fall far behind in skills, and thus in world competition, if our young people did not receive better

training and did not have heavier demands placed upon them, demands such as students in so many other countries take for granted. The fault does not He with thè students. It is we adults and most especially with so many of our so-called “professionals” who are entrusted with setting national educational standards—our “intellectuals”, our university professors, so many of whom are abdicating their responsibilities by easing their standards—and more alarmingly by an attempt to propagate through their courses their own leftist—yes, leftist convictions! How great thè irony that at this most dramatic and unbelievable moment of history, with so many countries sacrificing, suffering, and striking for freedom and free enterprise, that in our American universities, thè Marxist academics are today’s power elite, protected by thè magic of thè tenure System. A distinguished contemporary French philosopher has said, “I can’t fìnd any French Marxists. I have to import American intellectuals!” It is not that these academics convert our students to communism, but by denigrating traditional American values, by discrediting our great achievements of thè past, they inevitably dilute and neutrahze our young people’s commitment to and belief in thè values that have made our country great and which now more than ever need vigorously to be defended.

J 11 «J

The

aim of

EDUCATION IS NOT THE KNOWLEDGE OF FACTS BUT OF VALUES. Dean Inge, St. Paul’s Cathedral

A. v

,rr'fSf Villa Soldati, first

To be sure, my strong statements apply to “higher” education, so called, in our univer­ sities. How much greater thè responsibihty and thè urgency thus placed upon secondary schools to provide their students with sohd,

campus in Lugano

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F I F T I E S basic academic preparation for true quality university level work, and even more importantly, with strong values and convictions that assure their resistance to dangerous propaganda and attempts at brain washing in various insidious forms. It is in these areas that thè freedom of an independent school to be tough and set high standards is so important to me. We can and do refuse to give thè faddish, popular, worthless smorgasbord courses offered in so many U.S. high schools. We can require that every senior takes a compelling course in thè Humanities, to give them thè magnificent history of Western Civilization, why it is being threatened, and why

it is up to us to defend it. For, as Dostoevsky warns us, “Humaneness is only a habit, a product of civilization. It may completely disappear.” Paul Valéry said, “Civilizations are mortai.” And H. G. Wells put it dramatically too: “Civilization is a race between education and catastrophe.” How well TASIS or any other good school succeeds in achieving high goals is yet to be proved by thè calibre of human beings we are producing, and what impact they are having or will have on our remarkable world, on our extraordinary Western Civilization, with its beliefs in justice and in thè importance of thè individuai human spirit.

She Was Welcome to Our Son for a Year ^^hen our son John was 14 in 1956 we thought he was ready for a different sort of summer experience and so, having met MCF briefly in Michigan where we then lived, we enrolled him in Swiss Holiday which was be­ ing based in Locamo. We were interviewed by MCF in New York and passed inspection and in early June John and his father met thè group at thè airport in New York for thè flight to Milan. Among those present was Gai Fleming then about 16. In her white gloves she was a lovely, self confìdent, gracious young lady. Very near thè end of thè Swiss Holiday pro­ gram MCF decided to start a school in Locarno to be called The American School in Switzerland, now TASIS. John wrote with this news and said he would like to stay. I wrote back saying “no way.” He then cabled and my response was thè same... so he then called his father at thè office and his response was that he

had met Gai and if MCF could do that with her own daughter then she was welcome to our son for a year. And so he stayed and was one of twelve students, three of whom were Mrs. Fleming’s own children. This led to 35 years of continued association, as I became her west coast representative and visited thè school annually for 23 years. What a wonderful, warm, pleasant relationship it has been. Now that I’m “old” and retired I don’t see her very often and I miss her. Our second son and our granddaughter have both been part of various TASIS programs over thè years. We all three send our warmest love and best wishes for many more happy birthdays. Jean Gage San Francisco, California Alumni parent and Former West Coast Representative, TASIS

Turning Point in My Life My year with Mrs. Fleming was certainly a tuming point in every aspect of my fife. What began as a summer travel camp became a year away from my family filled with unimaginably rich experiences for a boy from Michigan—first opera at thè Roman amphitheater in Verona, midnight mass on Christmas eve in Barcelona, struggling on skiis above Andermatt, crew rowing on Lago Maggiore, posing for brochure photographs in every imaginable setting. The list of those kinds of warm memories is nearly endless

70

and they suffuse that year in a warm glow. Since mine was thè first year of thè school, I recali that many aspects were “played by ear.” In some aspects, there may not have been a pian or thè pian may not have worked as anticipated, but I remember thè excitement of thè unexpected and learning that things always worked out one way or another and that, in any event, it was thè “experience” that counted. I also picked up some earthier skills that have proven useful. Mrs. Fleming introduced me to


F I F T I E S

Ski break in Andermatt: (I.) Gay Fleming, Jim Elford, Mrs. Fleming, George Clark, Tom Fleming, ski instructor, Tony Metzger, me in my younger days, Lynn Fleming, George Metzger, Kristine, and Ellen Fairweather

______ L One of those special Swiss Holiday costume parties—Betsy Bacon (I.) is escorted by Marc Schreiber and l’m on thè right

Mrs. Fleming and I share a visit at a Reunion

bartending and thè art of crushing ice with thè back of a heavy spoon so that martinis (or, I suppose, even sweet vermouth) would be perfectly chilled. I carne to love Mrs. Fleming as my own “second mother,” and despite thè long gaps in our relationship, that love has continued through thè intervening years. That’s one reason it was so special to send my daughter, Lisa, to Mrs. Fleming (I understand she was thè first of thè second generation). My love and best wishes to Mrs. Fleming on her birthday. John Gage Mill Valley, California One of thè first students, first year of TASIS

71


F I F T I E

s

Never a Dull Moment It is with great joy that I can congratulate you, Mrs. Fleming, on your 80th birthday. You can imagine that at a moment like this my heart is full of fond memories—do you remember Thanksgiving Day 1956? Sometime in between thè turkey and 11 p.m. I walked into thè Villa Verbanella Alta in Minusio, hardly speaking any English. Early next morning we took off to Florence, I as thè driver of one of thè famous blue VW buses. "l’m obviously shaking thè hand of my favorite man!”—Marc Schreiber

That was thè beginning of a fascinating period of my life—an experience I would never have missed. First of all there was Florence, a city I fell in love with thè minute I got there. Then I realized thè great idea behind this trip—thè idea of M.C.F. for an American School in Switzerland, and I also realized its foremost purpose: to give young people thè chance to understand other people and countries, other mentalities—to show them ways of life different from thè way of life in their own country. To this idea you gave all your intellectual, physical and economie capacities available. And I had thè chance to find out that Europe was not necessarily thè navel of thè world. This experience is of great value to me for making up my own mind and to judge what is hap­ pening in thè world and in Europe today. There was a young staff working at thè

School those days, young people from thè United States and from Europe, most of them having something in common: not simply to start a career or their own business, but to look around in a world which taught you a lot when you were ready to see and to learn. And of course we had good times too—and certainly never a dull moment. I remember that once during a Swiss Holiday camp I dared to take off on my own for two days. When I carne back thè school was dead silent, no students— no counselors were around. Only a maid was there explaining that M.C.F., on coming back from a trip, found some of thè students at home (probably recovering from a camping trip), and immediately organized ad hoc trips for them. Nobody should ever get thè idea that there could be a dull moment. Do you remember thè Bishop from Gibraltar, who thought he could walk across thè water and ended up in thè pond of your patio? During thè early years of thè School there were moments when some of us had some doubts whether thè School could really become a success and whether thè budget could ever be brought back into balance. It was thanks to your strong belief in your idea that you could highly motivate all of us again. The way you opened your home to us was an example of your way of thinking, of your idea of hospitality which you followed constantly. This also made me feel that I worked not only for thè School’s director, but for a friend. Dear Mrs. Fleming, I am very happy to send you my heartiest and most affectionate best wishes for your birthday, wishing you many happy returns in good health. Marc Schreiber Basel, Switzerland Former counselor, then Director; Swiss Holiday

Some Memories of Locamo Times Streak of silver in her hair— Old WWII German staff car, convertible style— Lots of boyfriends, beautiful then—stili; Trips to Ascona, Da Emilio’s, boats on thè lake, Andermatt— One big happy family—

72

Ciao, Robert Sears Manila, Philippines One offirst students, TASIS


F I F T I E S

General to thè Rescue

we have known Cris for so many years, but several incidents stand out in our memory. In 1951, I was ordered from Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland, to Japan, so we took Susan, age 6, and Ron, age 4, to Frog Hollow, Penn­ sylvania, to leave them with Cris while we packed and prepared for thè move and rather long separation of thè family. Ron slept with Lynn on Cris’s porch while Susan was in with thè other children. While touring Europe after my retirement in 1957, we were hurrying from Germany, Austria, and Lichtenstein to spend Phyllis’s birthday on December 3 with Cris and kids. When we arrived at thè school in Locamo, we found that unexpectedly Cris’s math teacher had to leave, and she could not get thè replacement down there until after Christmas. The school at that rime consisted of seventh and eighth grades (Cris moved right along with her children), and high school. So I taught Lynn and Ron arithmetic in seventh grade, and Geometry to

Gai, et al, in high school. A few months later we had spent a couple of weeks in Mallorca, then gone to Madrid, and were at thè airport to catch our piane back to Barcelona where our VW bus was. We ran into Cris, Gai, Tom and Lynn at thè airport just returning from a trip to thè USA. Cris prevailed upon us to retum to Mallorca and spend rime thqre so she could recover from her trip. During that stay, we made Cris sit down and figure just how much each student was costing her, what her “nut” was, so she could find out what she should be charging, and how many students she needed. She found out that with thè tuition she was charging, and thè students she was allowing to enter free, she was losing money. It was thè last rime we had to suggest to Cris that her tuition was too low. General Jacquard and Phyllis Rothschild f (written in 1980)

.... I moved to thè only place I could find in Lugano, because it was so late when I started looking. I had thè summer program Swiss Holiday in thè rented properties in Locamo. When thè group was small I always used to meet them in Zurich or Milan and at thè end of thè summer accompany them back to thè airport and kiss them all good-bye. I remember when I went up to Zurich with thè summer students, I had fifty students enrolled for thè winter, but I didn’t know where I was going to put them. Actually I was scheduled for an operation in Zurich, but I had to carnei thè appointment and say pardon me very much, but I have to go back to Lugano and find a building and start a school in three weeks. When I went back I found a property that I rented forfwe years. One of Cris Fleming’s many greetings of a piane full of Swiss Holiday students

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The new campus was just a big piece of gingerbread cake, and I had rented it with an option to purchase within one year for a million dollars. This was a huge sum of money, and I knew I could never afford it, but at least I had thè option to purchase. I spent thè three weeks trying to put it into condition because it had been derelict for years — there were Windows missing, with distorted frames, there was no kitchen to speak of I got everything ready for sleeping, but had to take thè children to a restaurant for thè first three weeks of school because thè kitchen wasn’t ready, and I had no cook. At least I did open there with fìfty students. Of course, I had virtually two jobs—running thè school and promoting it to keep students coming to pay thè bills. I lost a few students that year because I was in America a great deal, trying to raise money. I had hopes of actually being able to purchase thè property, but in those days that kind of money for a property in Switzerland was shocking. It wouldn’t be now, but in those days people in thè States couldn’t believe that a house in Lugano, which a lot of them had never even heard of, would be worth that kind of money. Eventually, I sold my option to Baron Thyssen, which is when my friendship started ivith him. (Actually, not too long after, thè Baron sold thè property and made a million dollars on it, which was a good basis for our friendship!) From him I got a five-year rental; I got no money out of thè agreement since all sales money went to thè owners of thè property, but I did get peace of mind from having a roof over my students. Even though Heini Thyssen bought thè gingerbread property, Villa Soldati, I was allowed to stay there and when he sold it I stili had thè option of staying in it forfìve years. But that’s when I started looking to buy because I realized I couldn’t keep moving. By then it was apparent that thè school was going to be pertnanent and a success and I was committed to living in Europe and to having my children live and be educated in Europe.... Villa Soldati—‘‘a big piece of gingerbread cake”

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How Many Lives Have You Swept Into? One evening during thè winter, 1958, someone knocked on thè door of my small apartment at Berkshire School. I suspect I was

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grading papers or reading some assignment— maybe about Ethan Frome, who was feeling “all snowed in”. I probably was feeling that


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way myself. I opened thè door to find Guy Tolman. And then you, Mrs. Fleming, swept in. “How would you like to travel in Europe this summer?” you asked. I wonder how many times you have been described as “sweeping in”? I wonder how many lives, perhaps otherwise snowed-in lives, you have swept into? And then, fresh out of thè Army and all “barracks’d in”, I rode with you on a train from N.Y.C. to Philadelphia. Not even my interview with you was stationary. Next thing I knew I was on a train winding its way through snow and night to Andermatt. I wonder how

many people have taken that train-ride to one of your schools, and from that point on have been caught up in your perpetuai motion—not just during thè school years but for thè rest of their lives? What adventuresomeness you have woven into thè fabric of many lives! And what an adventure your own life has been! Eighty Fleming-years must equal ab out ten lives. Happy Birthday. And many, many thanks. Jim Durham Carpenteria, California Former English teacher, TASIS

Recollections of Times Past I went to work for Mary Crist Fleming in 1959. My position was secretary to her assistant Karen Mundt. I arrived at thè school while all thè Flemings were on vacation cruising around thè Greek Isles. I was welcomed by Graziella, thè maid, Herman Baumgartner, thè gardener, and Sister Ida. I temporarily stayed in thè baraccas, but then later moved into a room I rented from Sister Ida. Karen Mundt was also on vacation; so my fìrst day, I walked into an empty office and opened thè desk drawer. Dozens of unanswered letters were placed out-of-sight. I thoroughly read thè school’s catalogues and answered all those I could. After four days, thè place was abustle because thè Flemings were returning home. My fìrst meeting with Cris Fleming was in her bedroom of thè converted garage at Loreto. She spared no time in detailing her aspirations for thè school which was then comprised of 29 students. She showed me photographs of thè Joos property which she was negotiating to purchase. In her mind she had thè entire property renovated and running as a school. She had thè next ten years of growth visualized. She detailed at length her perception of thè job that I would grow into. After a couple of hours I left in a complete daze and thought, “this lady is crazy.” Nonetheless, in two years time, I was doing everything she thought I could do and although we were not moving into thè Joos property, we did move into De Nobili. The move from Loreto to De Nobili was a family affair. To this day, my brother feels very guilty about having dropped a bed from one of thè Windows, narrowly missing Tom by a few centimeters. They met last summer—30 years later—and my brother

was amused that Tom did not even remember thè incident. Cris was thè major generai making sure that everything got put into its correct place and that all was perfectly finished. When she was not looking, Arnold and Tom snuck off at frequent intervals to play thè pinball machines at Rosina’s. “She spared no time in detailing her aspira­ tions for thè school"

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One of thè most enjoyable vacations Jerry and I spent with Mrs. Fleming, Leo and Anne van Brussel, Lynn Fleming, and John Amis cruising thè Dalmatian coast

In one of her more girlish moments, Mrs.

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Fleming gets some groceries for our trip

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I shall never forget thè night before school opened. There was Cris up on a ladder retouching some of thè spots thè painters had missed. She stayed up all night and thè paint was stili wet when thè students arrived thè next day. Another incident etched in my mind was a trip to Andermatt with thè school bus. The road was closed but we forged on. The men stood on thè back bumper of thè bus while I prayed that we would make it. Cris was regally encouraging our efforts to proceed, never once considering turning back. The last few miles, some of us put on our skis and skicd in thè moonlight—one of thè most beautiful runs I’ve made. Cris was royally driven to thè welcoming hotel, and let us also not forget thè inexhaustible eggnog that was left outside to brew with generous portions of liquor added frequently by Cris. Another fond memory I have is when Cris decided to buy thè house in New York City on 69th Street (over thè phone) and fumish it with furniture from Europe. Since we had chartered a piane to take thè Swiss Holiday students back to thè U.S., Cris decided to take advantage of thè baggage space and to send thè furniture over to New York. However, not wanting to involve heavy customs duty, she persuaded thè students to check pieces through as their per­ sonal belongings. I argued with her and told her I didrit think we could get away with it, but, needless to say, she won thè argument and I found myself waving goodbye to her in her white dress at thè airport. I was very nervous at thè other end, and became even more perturbed when two young boys checked through thè same customs agent—one with thè head-


F I F T I E S

board and thè other with thè foot of thè same bed. I was so relieved to see Betsy and Gay in a great big van ready to load all thè furniture. It was at that point that there was a tap on my shoulder and a customs agent said, “Would you come with me please, ma’am.” To make a long story short, to my surprise, thè customs officials were concemed with a shipment of brochures describing TASIS Russia. How many picnics have we all spent with Cris Fleming? And how many of us have carried thè silver candelabra into thè strangest of locations? Needless to say, I learned quickly how to

make an Old Fashioned and how to make Old Fashioneds under thè most extraordinary circumstances. Also, can anyone guess how many employees were fired when they forgot ice?! One of thè most enjoyable vacations I’ve ever spent was when Cris rented a motor sailer and included my husband and me with her guests and family. We all felt included as family. Adele Bradbury Wells Georgetown University Washington, D.C. Former secretary and U.S. Representative, TASIS My son Piers and I welcome Cris Fleming on a recent visit to Washington

Madame’s Presence Uur friendship began way back in Frog Hollow days—and weren’t they fun? Such exquisite dinner parties, brunches, etc. one after thè other—always with Gertrude Burns keeping us all entranced as she played thè piano. Cris financed our fìrst trip to Europe, thè idea being that The American School in Switzerland might be a subject for an article in Holiday. Ted Patrick, thè editor, seemed enthusiastic and my husband Loring [Dusty] was sure he could write a piece about thè school which would benefit everyone. Unfortunately while we were stili in Europe, someone got to Ted on thè subject of doing a piece on Le Rosey, and he decided that was enough on thè

school business—breaking your mother’s and Dusty’s hearts. She never reproached Dusty for it, simply saying she was “sick about Patrick’s attitude,” but of course Lugano was only thè beginning. London and Greece were to follow— and almost Singapore! Cris is an amazing person, and will always be my very dear friend. I do remember one special day thè three of us took a boat out to an island on Lake Como —about as colorful a spot as I can think of. That in itself would have been enough for our day’s outing—but Cris out-did herself that day by taking us to thè Villa D’Este for drinks as a Grand Finale. There is no more gorgeous sight in thè world than of that mountain-ringed lake

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just at late afternoon. All thè Maitre D’s, as well as thè waiters, bowed and scraped in Madame’s presence—impressing us provincials enormously. I wish I could send you a picture Dusty snapped as we were returning from Isola di Comocino, of another small boat going in thè opposite direction with its fisherman reliev-

ing himself off thè rear, forming a perfect are. We were all convulsed, but thè man was totally unaware of us and our merriment, and I’m sure wouldn’t have cared if he’d seen us__ Sybil Dowst Doylestown, Pennsylvania

Mrs. Fleming’s dreams are contagious. Twenty years laterFording Europe expands to Swiss Holiday.

True Confessions of a Delightfully Mad and Equally Charming Swiss Holiday Counselor—30 Years Later

Super-driver Marco Hauert

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You were right, Mrs. Fleming, when you said to me in 1959, “Marco, a young teacher can only become an old teacher”. I’m getting there...at 54, stili broke, stili free, stili remembering words of wisdom, spoken on a hot summer day in thè flourishing gardens of Loreto__ Flashback sequence, dose up: sweating brow, bare hands loading, unloading freight trains, night shifts at Zurich train station. Tired I rested, fell asleep in thè early morning hour, woke up in Lugano. Got off thè freight train, looking for a job, was hired by you Mrs. Fleming as a Swiss Holiday Counselor__ Miracles do happen! A tali, elegant, good looking young man, with spitshined loafers with a penny stuck on thè side, took off a racing glove and shook my hand: “My name is Tom Fleming. Are you free now, can you follow me and drive a bus to thè Zurich airport? We have to pick up students__ ” Could I ever! What a treat, anything was better than loading trains 10 or 12 hours a night. Little did I know, Tom was not a bus driver, he was a formula-one super minibus racer just back from thè “24 heures du Mans” and about to go to “Monza”. Needless to say, at thè end of thè nineteen fifties Europe was not equipped with freeways. America was stili a dreamland on another planet and James Dean was thè growing hero. So I accelerated to follow Tom, through medieval villages, narrow streets, sharp turns and stone bridges. There was no road tunnel through thè Gotthard Pass, no new road over it, but thè old “Tremola”, which my father had walked, heavily packed in thè army. Before getting so far in a left turn, over a nar­ row bridge, my nervous palm slipped on thè steering wheel, I had no gloves as did my idol in front of me. I cannot teli a He, Mrs. Fleming. With a delay of 32 years, I confess hitting thè stone wall of thè bridge, thus damaging your property and that of thè Canton Ticino. Lucki-

ly, thè bus bounced back, there was no traffìc, Tom was way ahead instead of stopping, I ac­ celerated. In Zurich we picked up students from America, they sang along thè winding road of Lake Lucerne, over thè Gotthard and down thè Tremola back to Loreto where you stood with a bright smile, arms stretched out, bracelets shining in thè sun, caHing each child by his name as if he was your own, yet you had never seen them before. It was then thè fìrst time that I admired you. Many more times followed, too many__ Flemingland was born out of your enthusiasm, your dream, your faith—a highly intelHgent drug, sugar-coated with lots of feehng from a warm heart—an impossible dream about to explode Hke little blue buses all over Europe. Yet, only a few months before in Locamo, not even in a house or a villa, just in a simple apartment, a dynamic not-so-young lady had decided to found an empire at an age when lots of others begin to think of retirement. She called “a school” a group of 12 kids out of which three were her own. Money brought her nothing for she had none. Beauty? Did you say women have it easy thanks to beauty? Well yes, her charm was of irresistible beauty, her mere presence cast a speli over thè audience, she was clever and charming. Don’t ask me what she was to others, to me she was and probably stili is, a magnificent, superb, enthralhng actress. Her stage was any spot on earth she set her two high-heeled feet on, her feet always well apart soHdly camped, her arms outstretched to welcome thè world, her heart wide open to deliver speeches that would have made thè man in thè moon feel at home in Loreto. Some leaders use their power to seduce negatively, but her strength is positive energy to build a world of understanding, open young minds, mix and mingle cultures, to foster knowledge in a fast


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growing, ever-changing world. Napoleon would wink at his soldiers and by some mirade they’d walk all thè way to Russia and back. Well, after returning from Zurich, off we drove to Milan, back to Seville, Athens, Istanbul, Libya, Rome or Berlin, Paris, Madrid or Vienna. At thè time we believed ourselves to be outstanding drivers; now I know that it was just luck—all thè angels of paradise racing over each blue bus to protect thè singing children. Yes, I know times have changed, I’ve grown old, but no fool. In those happy days kids used to sing such songs as: “Row, row, row your boat, gently down thè stream__ ” Now, three decades later, they sing thè same tune with different words such as, “Roll, roll, roll your joint, pass it down thè line__ ” But thè angels are stili there to protect us all and we must not give up hope, not think how clever we are. Maybe we are stili just lucky. Mrs. Fleming, don’t ask me why I keep writing to you. In our society, business cards are exchanged and businessmen stay in touch, for they all have some hidden vested interest, to keep smiling at each other. But you and me, we never exchanged cards. I stili don’t have one; if I did, under my name should be written “dreamer”. Maybe I stili write to you because you are my dream come true—a very platonic love story, one of fìrst love never to be forgotten, fìrst job, memories of youth, a newborn child called Flemingland. Somehow, I stili feel

that I was a small cog in thè big machine—a machine that carved my life for I stili drive buses stuffed with kiddies and if I had not met Gai and Lynn and Tom, and their star mother, stepping down thè stairs of Villa Soldati in Loreto, between thè four columns holding up thè stucco ceiling, I might not be as happy as I am to remember those crazy, mad, joyful sunny days of our youth. Maybe I simply stay in touch because, thanks to you, I keep falling in love with our youth, as years go by, days of “wine and roses” grow more beautiful, a symphony of young, laughing, enthusiastic children discovering a magnifìcent world. Fleming in wonderland, wonder in Flemingland. A happy dreamer fìnds his fortune in thè future when he is young, when he is old, and has popped all thè colorful balloons of his dreams and illusions, then he fìnds his fortune in thè past. Pardon me if you are thè leading character of my past, thè spark of life that set off thè fìre of a stili burning enthusiasm. How else would it be possible for a “papa” over half a century old to zoom down thè snowy mountains, under blue sky, with a wild horde of juniors behind him? Some say there are such things as heart attacks, maybe, but if they exist why not meet them with a smile? A smile I owe you, Mrs. Fleming, in fact this letter could be called: “I.O.U.” For after all it was thanks to you that I learned to smile when stuck in Berlin long before thè wall was built,

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stuck there during thè crisis when we were blocked in East Berlin, tanks moving face to face, East and West defying each other at gun point and our “Swiss Holiday” kids crawHng all over thè tanks, while I was taking pictures trying to get our little blue bus into thè shot. Meanwhile, back in thè U.S.A., parents were panicking. You calmed thè parents tehing them that we were dancing in Berlin discos, while others, like General Clay, got ready to protect us from thè third world war which was about to explode. You again calmed down parents when another year on another trip, newspapers world wide printed thè horrible news of 10,000 or more dead, showing shattered houses and flattened tourist hotels during thè Skopje earthquake. It happened thè day we were supposed to have been there according to schedule. You had no news from us for it was impossible for us to cali, but you told terrifìed parents that Marco was never on time and you assured them that we had missed thè earthquake. Yugoslavia had only one paved road at thè time, thè one Crossing from Trieste to Greece via Belgrade. We had chosen thè hard way, narrow dust roads along thè beautiful coastline to Dubrovnik. Before thè horrible news reached Dubrovnik, a band of singing and playing young Yugoslavs was sitting on our blue bus, a small crowd following as thè loud band was leading thè marching parade along thè walls of thè ancient city. A band of wild East and West Coast kids was chanting along to cliché songs like: “When thè Saints__ ” On thè right bus mirror hung a dusty U.S. flag and on thè left mirror a dusty red flag, 30 years before “Benetton” advertised “vive la difference”. We drove on to Budva, Tivat, and Kolasin in thick white powdery dust. We had seen Sarajevo, taken photos of Tina Uihlein on thè 1000-year-old bridge before thè Mostar mosque, and camped in thè mountains of Montenegro with a load of blonde, blue-eyed boys and mostly girls. Mrs. Fleming, do you realize what could have happened? Or is thè world more evil now than it was then? Could one go camping in Iran, or Turkey, or Lebanon now? At thè time I thought we were smart; now I see how lucky we were. Albania could be seen just across thè border. Tito’s picture was everywhere and Stalin’s was not far. Tourists were non-existent. Crowds gathered thè moment we stopped anywhere. Driving East inland was like Cross­ ing thè Grand Canyon—falling rocks, dust

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now dark red, we looked like Indians. Tiny moslem villages, lots of mosques, no churches, a market place with our bus thè only enginepowered vehicle Crossing it, a dancing bear with a ring in his nose—it was like a stage from “1000 and one nights”—red flags everywhere, night fading, and our busload looking for a campground. By now thè kids knew that not ad places looked like Winnetka or Beverly Hills. When I write “kids” it includes myself, for at thè time I was just two or three years older, just on thè other side of thè driver’s dcense. I had never seen Beverly Hills, only Swiss Alps, but here thè mountains were wild and had nothing in common with thè ones I knew. I’d never forget thè top of a pass on thè way to “Pecz”, in a lonely wildemess, no yodeHng farmers here, but a crowd of turban-clad moslems looking like forerunners of Afghan “freedom fighters” or would-be “ayatodahs”, shouting, laughing at us as we stopped in search of water. It was not thè kind of natives you’d meet in Andermatt, at least not then. A small group dragged me away, a bigger group surrounded our girls. My Serbo-Croatian was limited to “Jvala”, meaning thanks and “Jivele”, meaning “cheers”. Indicating that we were thirsty, they poured a jug of clear mountain water down my throat. It burnt dke hed—it was called “sHwovitz”. Ad sneered and giggled, teeth, eyes, hands grabbing, bodies pushing. I tried to get back to thè bus which was sur­ rounded by cheerful, too cheerful, mountain men; ad had to drink, but they (my charges) didn’t. The party was getting wildly out of hand, when thè terrible news of thè earthquake, brought over thè pass by a soldier with a prehistoric motorbike and a red star on his cap, calmed thè audience. “Skopje kaputt”, was thè explanation. So was I, for at last I dare confess to you Mrs. Fleming, that wild lot had got me drunk in no time__ The valley down there turned, thè road was rocky, too steep, thè mountains ad around were dancing; I’d never make it down there with ad those kids, yet to stay here was not a good idea either. Never under any circumstance get out of fìrst gear. A11 were hstening to thè horrible news; it was thè best time to leave. The girls were screaming, rushing into thè bus. I was sick; ITI remember it ad my dfe. At that time I was your luckiest driver. Someone shouted: “Hurry, let’s get out of here!”. Out of fear of losing control, we cdmbed down thè dusty winding road in


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fìrst gear only. Down in thè valley thè stomach retumed to thè land what belonged to thè land. A small town, loudspeakers everywhere: “Skopje wiped off thè map, thousands of dead.” Police “Milizia” stopped us. A soldier climbed into thè crowded bus, a young doctor for Skopje. I explained to thè kids, no more singing, no more joking, a terrible earthquake has wiped a big town off thè map. We pick up another doctor, a civilian. To thank us they offer us “sliwovitz”. They seem in no hurry to get to Skopje. They like our girls. They ask me to stop at every tavern. What about thè dead in Skopje? “The dead are dead, we are alive”, Comes a stunning answer in broken German. In thè evening they set us up in army barracks set up for thè wounded who have not yet arrived from Skopje. All night thè soldiers and thè young doctors were dancing with or without our girls, trying to feed me more “sliwovitz”. Was it Gifford Hooker or someone else who asked “Where are we?”. ”No idea” was my answer. “Where are we supposed to be today?” “In Skopje.” All this to teli you Mrs. Fleming why you were right when you said that we were late. Next day we drove through Skopje and we all wished never ever to be on time if it was to meet with such horror as we saw__ Greece and thè young Greek gods, thè “Hilton Shmilton” as you called it, strawberry milkshakes and cheeseburghers, Hydra, Epidaurus, thè emise on thè Aegean was like paradise after going through purgatory. Istan­ bul, thè blue mosque, driving on to Ankara, more fiat tires than spare wheels and two wild Turks jumping out of thè bush with hatchets in their hands, taking more interest in our girls than in our fiat tires. We could not chase them away nor could we drive off. Again your lucky star carne to help us__ Back through Athens to marvel at ancient Greece, thè endless non­ stop drive to Igonmenitsa. We got there over passes, coast roads, stones and dust at 6 a.m. next morning to catch thè ferry to Brindisi. On thè way, Crossing caravans of purple elephants, pink crocodiles, and green kangoroos had slowed thè driver down! Brindisi: thè place where we totalled 38 staring boys in less than a minute. All records broken. Many more followed thè blue bus to what was called a campground—a Fellini-like set-up in never-never land with a Coca Cola stand and blasting music. The boys (our boys, what a shame) set up a dance floor. They put all thè Italian boys in a long line and thè one who

paid us a drink was allowed to dance with one of our girls. Sorry, it is only with a delay of 30 years that I can teli thè truth, a most Fellinilike truth. After, carne thè “Trulli”, Rome, and Florence with all its magic and Betty Jane never getting out of complicated stories, not to mention thè boy who with thè help of others was trying to load a Roman statue (for souvenir sake) into thè bus. No tollways yet in Italy, only winding roads climbing up and down thè Appenines. “Aida” in thè Roman theatre of Verona with a thousand candles burning—I.O.U. Mrs. Fleming these unforgettable scenes, if only what’s her name had not thrown up her pizza right next to me in thè front row of “La Scala” in Milan. An entire front row emptied in no time. La Scala seats were to be had for free for “Il Trovatore”. Well, kids will be kids, and not all stomachs can take a pizza and “Il Trovatore”. Arles, Pont du Gard, thè crazy Hooker family diving off thè Roman aqueduct—lucky again. Not so much when near Perpignan your “super” driver shouted “Legs up!”. The front row in thè bus lifted their legs a second before we hit front on thè car that carne around thè corner. No wounded, just “bus bobo” lucky and on we drove after serious repairs and Tom bringing a new bus. Pamplona, Hemingway memories, all bulls loose in thè streets, our boys showing our girls and thè Spanish girls how fearless a Texan can be. More luck than ever!! Fear increases when you are helpless; I could only watch our boys from afar. No e.s.p. could stop thè wild bulls. Franco’s Spain LO. U.—its beauty, thè way I.O.U. thè shock of Omaha beach and thè beauty of thè Loire Valley. Avila, Salamanca— some fools with guns asking for our girls to get out of their tents. It took endless talking to have them lower their guns. I drove them to a shabby inn, offered them wine and thè com­ pany of easy “ladies”, whose toothless smiles appealed to our “heroes”. Lucky again! E1 Escoriai, thè way of thè catholic kings in a blue bus; Toledo, E1 Greco, Navacerrada, Sevilla, Cordoba, Jim and his fìlming his girlfriend thè “mouse”. Filming, sightseeing, shopping for spaghetti, camping, driving, driving through a Spain that no longer exists, so poor, so moving, so dry, so sunny, wheat fields, wheat carts drawn by donkeys, horses going in a circle thrashing wheat, farmers so polite saying with a touch of shame: “Forgive us Lord, if only we had enough bread to feed our children__ ” Gypsy

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women building roads with gravel carried in baskets. Madrid, thè Prado, Goya, Velasquez, thè “Bianco oscuro”, a country of hard contrasts I.O.U. Mrs. Fleming. Franco’s megalo­ mania, thè memorial to thè dead of thè civil war built by his dying prisoners. An oncoming Citroen French license piate. A good friend, one of our students, I see his face, thin, slender body flying through thè air, shattered bones. The boy’s father was a producer; he was half Mexican. The boy spoke Spanish, he could communicate with thè locai village doctor who carne to see him, chewing on a big cigar. The “hospital” I.O.U., for I had never seen anything like it. I much preferred thè tangerine orchard which belonged to thè doctor, in fact he was even exporting oranges as a side line to his job. I remember diving in Verzasca with thè same boy after his accident. Lucky again! It was that boy who said to me once: “I’il never forget how you spoke to that poor peasant in thè wheatfield. You talked to him as if he were some big shot director generai__ ” That peasant in Spain was a great man, for judging by his hands and his face he had worked all his life for nothing. Mara Orsi on thè bridge of Avignon, my Italian girl friend, your language teacher. Thanks to Mara all your girls were safe. I was madly in love with her; she has done many of those crazy trips with us. She is thè mother of our 22-year old daughter, Lisa__ Remember when you sent me off to celebrate camival in Germany with thè Post Graduates? We left Andermatt in a snow storm, walls of snow right and left. Snowfall all thè way to Munich and a little blue bus skidding on icy roads. Munich, thè famous German museum was less attractive than thè Hofbrauhaus. Photos with liter beer mugs means German culture seen by foreign students. Songs, car­ nivai and__ help, more snow and a bus to drive home__ Responsibility is thè word that pops into a beer-drenched brain. Snow fading, polke, blood test—safe is safe, no one ever stopped a car for speeding when in reverse gear. One could always say it was just being parked. All our Post Graduates were busy singing, as I drove them in reverse gear through Munich, over a bridge, back to our hotel. Lucky again, except thè gearshift. Maryanne Mott was on that trip, if I remember well. On we drove from cheerful Bavaria to Salzburg. On thè way at some gas station one of our girls found a handbag in thè ladies

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room. The Austrian gas station operator had taken down our number. In Vienna it was stili snowing as I crawled into a warm bed. Polke carne to pick me up. The girl never told anyone about thè “found” handbag. When I asked why I was in jail, it dawned on me that even thè guilty ones ask thè same stupid question. So I spent a freezing night with a couple of drunks in a Vienna jail. I.O.U. my release and thè visit to Schonbrunn. Back to Andermatt for crazy skiing whilst Mara was skating. By now you had promoted me to thè rank of “teacher”. My first student was Vicky Frank. I was not very successful and should have given up thè “career” right then. But, doing a poor job one tries to improve and instead gets worse and worse. Next carne Dennis thè Menace; I stili remember you introducing his father to thè school. Third student was Freda Wolff, followed by Marty. By now your empire was growing fast like a fresh plant in spring, blossoming into many ramifications. The 12 kids in Locamo had exploded into a reai school with a yearbook of 10 pages of students and 16 pages of locai ads, from patrons, TWA, Gambrinus, to Tipografia Pedrazzini. The Swiss Holiday program was well under way. Many more “counselors” were racing blue buses all over Europe and Rupert Mostert felt narrowed in, so he drove a little bus through Egypt and thè deserts of Libya. The Post Graduate Program was launched after our trip in reverse through Munich. At this point any wild dream was due to come true. Only Walter Winiger was madly hitting thè brakes and counting pennies. We thank him for holding thè dreams down to earth or else— In this creative, dreaming, cheerful mood all illusions could be taken for reai. If I remember well, thè name was Irene Bronston. At thè rime Jim Durham and Tony Ryser had made a school film, but to me thè reai dream was Irene. Someone had said that her father had made “Ben Hur” or was a big producer. On top of it all, some pros were in Andermatt filming Irene. Dream of all dreams— Hollywood. Of course I always wanted to make films, to write scripts. I just never had thè guts to teli anyone. America at thè rime had not come to Europe yet, with its tollways, its McDonalds and Mister Proper. “Dallas” was stili in Dallas and “Santa Barbara” stili in California. U.S.A. was stili thè dreamland of thè new frontier—especially for a little Swiss kid who began to work at 14 as a deh very boy,


F I F T I E S

at 15 landed a job feeding monkeys and birds on freight planes so that he could cross thè Atlantic at that age with 500 rhesus monkeys and 300 birds in 1951, hitchhike without a visa to Wisconsin and find a job on a farm run by a Swede. After three months thè little kid got kicked out of thè U.S.A., back to school, for he was not 16 yet. Your school was thè perfect excuse to get back to thè U.S. and maybe im­ migrate legally, this rime . Irene Bronston was thè dream element; maybe I’d write a script for her dad and return famous to mom and dad and buy them a house. I wrote a script, read it to Mara; after thè first lines she fell sound asleep. But I was not discouraged__ Montagnola followed Loreto, everything was growing out of proportion. I devoured your speeches; to me there was no greater actress from Gloria Swanson to Ava Gardner. You surpassed them all. I admired you endlessly because all you did succeeded beautifully, all thè luck was with Flemingland. We were but a few but we took care of many. Only one teacher was necessary to teach Algebra II, Russian, Physics, and Chemistry. Another could teach on his own Biology, Geometry, Algebra I, and General Science. Mara did French and Latin, Anna Riva Italian and Spanish, and I taught French and German, went to Pedrazzini, dropped off Jeremy Miller, who told me: “The world will be in increasing chaos. It’s a mathematical law...”, brought back Madame Hausmann from her hotel, all according to your instructions. Max was told to check thè john, it had been leaking; Sister Ida was asked about thè sick; like Florence Nightingale she walked thè school grounds with her little basket fìlled with medicines. Next you checked if Herr Wagner was ready for thè big evening, ambassador so and so was your guest. Elena asked you what to do coming out of her clouds and Miss Bradbury was asked to send off thè latest mail to thè U.S.A. Like a generai before a big battle you were everywhere. Then carne thè glamorous dinner, thè candlelight, thè students as thè young ambassadors, thè old ambassador, and you, who directed them all in a perfect choreography. Gai and Lynn were superb assistants, Tom was very effective too, but in thè end it all narrowed down to a one-lady orchestra. Like Ben Hur, you were holding thè reins of all your horses in one hand and your list of things to do in thè other—no Roman chariot ever counted as many horses as you were running simultaneously.

Time to conquer Egypt. Off you sent me with Sue Rafferty, Ellen Rogers, Don MacDermid, and mostly girls to Alexandria, Cairo, Luxor, Aswan—a dusty train ride wrapped in wet blankets for there was no air-conditioning. The girls found friends from Lebanon; Beirut at thè rime was thè pearl of thè Near East. The Lebanese invited all of us to thè Auberge des Pyramides, Farouk’s former private night club. From thè Sheraton to thè Pyramids, to thè Valley of Kings and Queens, we remember Ellen’s scream throughout thè hotel when a huge lizard fell from rive floors above “splash” on thè roof of thè lift just after she called thè elevator. In Luxor Sue complained about a huge fat fly on her piate. The dark black waiter wrapped thè fly in a salad leaf and ate it with a grin rolling his eyes. Aswan, where thè dam was not yet built. Sue wanted to buy a little 14 year-old snake charmer and bring him home. She was appalled when she found out that he used a whip on his little girl friend or sister. Not to be forgotten in thè back Street of a small village near thè border of Sudan, a circus. All thè women in chicken “cages” thè loges, all thè men with big sticks hearing wildly thè ground with increasing frenzy, to thè performance of a belly dancer in thè middle of thè small arena. It was our luck that kidnap­ ping had not yet become fashionable in thè Middle East.

Mara Orsi celebrates her 50th with me and our daughter Lisa

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Moral educaTIONIS IMPOSSIBLE WITHOUT THE HABITUAL VISION OF GREATNESS. Whitehead

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In less than two years and many thousands of miles Flemingland had grown from thè Atlantic to thè Suez Canal, thè only loss being a beloved canary who was our bus mascot and who preferred to stay at thè Vezelay monastery on top of a tree rather than visit thè rest of thè world in a minibus. As for us, when we saw our minibus lifted in thè air by a crane, loading it onto a ship Crossing to thè islands, we imagined a journey into thè sun. What if we just kept going West? It must have been camping near Bonaparte’s memorial in Ajaccio that turned our heads. Mara and myself talked about America; thè kids on thè bus told us how great it was...I.O.U. a superb recommendation for dreamland U.S.A. In Rusty Fletcher’s room I had seen a postcard of Pebble Beach, as far as one could go West before falling into thè Pacific. This was thè place! It was also Mr. Fletcher’s (was it Westinghouse?) private school, Robert Louis Stevenson. He recommended me, they offered me a job. 1.0.U. and thè U.S. Embassy a one A immigration visa, something like Werner Von Braun only had: it said for “people urgently needed” in thè U.S.A. Someone obviously made a mistake or you wanted to get rid of me fast! Mara was not allowed because she was Italian and a visa for her would take years. I would “check out” thè U.S. and come back to marry her. The Wild West, dream of all dreams. I crossed thè land on thè California Zephyr expecting to meet John Wayne on his horse upon arrivai. Instead, it was a little [homosexual] with a colorful suit and highpitched voice who picked me up screaming: “Hou, Hou, Frenchie, here I am. I am thè director of thè English department, I’ve been waiting for you__ ” Well, maybe I should have come with Mara. Next summer I was back driving a little blue bus for you to Greece. Your school had grown after Loreto, Mon­ tagnola, and then Vezia. All thè big aristocratic properties fell under your speli. Were Versailles, Schonbrunn, thè Winter Palace on thè list? In generai euphoria, Mara and I got married with your blessing in Montagnola. This time both of us had a job as heads of thè language depart­ ment at thè San Rafael Military Academy__ [And off thè Hauerts went for more adventures in thè great land of Marco’s dreams.] If you are not asleep reading [my life’s story],

you may wonder why I write all this. I don’t know Mrs. Fleming; maybe simply because you are my dream come true, because of all thè wonderful things I.O.U. All thè beauty of thè Pacific Coast, thè high Sierras, Yosemite, thè Grand Canyon, thè deserts, thè open-hearted, generous, broadminded people, thè youth, thè joy of living, stili poor but so rich, thanks to you, nothing to give except enthusiasm, thè joy of living. Those ten years I.O.U....... In Loreto, I felt like a giant ready to devour life. Now fife has devoured me. Climbing thè Magic Moun­ tain to Montagnola, higher, higher with no end, when getting to thè top, it’s simply down, down thè hill I’ve climbed for fìfty years. How do I know I’ve reached thè top? Not through awards and glory, just a feeling in my legs when skiing, in thè head when driving, all over when getting home from work, so now it’s coasting down a bit. If it were to be done again all over, I’d do thè same thing with students to thè Amazonas, to Kenya, Tokyo, Calcutta, thè Andes, Moscow or Australia, to study geography, ecology, how to preserve our planet, for as Voltaire says in Candide: “Il faut cultiver notre jardin.” Thanks Mrs. Fleming for giving us thè kick-off for America, for thè exciting first ten years of my teaching fife... Is there stili someone out there who remembers “Loreto”? Early days of camping, cooking out, old songs? Where have all thè flowers gone? If some Swiss Holidayers were to cross me in thè Street we would not recognize each other, so all there is left are thè joyful memories. And in thè midst of them you stand so young and beautiful as ever, addressing all youngsters by thè thousands, all gathered in your magic Montagnola gardens, telling them as you told us 30 years ago: “...you will be braced to whatever buffetings fate has in store and it will be said of you—They stood FOUR SQUARE, to all thè winds that blew__ A very special part of TASIS will always remain with you—” Thanks for those words Mrs. Fleming. A special part did remain and may you stand, as they stood, for many rewarding, joyous years in thè best of health. Happy Birthday. Marco Hauert Geneva, Switzerland International School


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kneiv that a school couldn’t be in a rentedproperty indefinitely. So in i960 I bought Villa De Nobili in Montagnola. I paid a half-a-million francs, which was a steal, even in those days. I was able to put a downpayment on thè beautiful 17th-centmy villa and property by asking thè parents of enrolled students to pay thè tuition in advance. I bave never been afraid to take risks, and happily Swiss banks bave finally given me loans, which is very good of them. I collect mortgages like most women collect chartns for their bracelets. I never thought a stamp collection was as interesting as mortgages, in terms of collectors’ items! Villa de Nobili—1925

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S I X T I E S Soon after acquiring thè heart of a permanent campus for TASIS, we bought Hadsall House, a property across thè Street from Villa De Nobili. My own house on thè campus has always been a private house although thè school uses it a great deal; my children called it Grand Central Station for many years. Over thè years we bought two more properties contiguous to us, Villa Belvedere and Balmelli. Two years ago, we built a new building, Villa Monticello, because we now have 250 students. We also bave to rent properties in thè village. The land is limited and there is only so much construction we can do, but we will have to build one more dormitory to replace those rentals. We must also replace thè provisionai buildings of thè gym and thè swimming pool. We have made a contract with thè town that we will only take 250 students, otherwise they are afraid that we will explode. They already think we have taken over thè small village of Certenago. We are quite a large group of people when you consider adding a faculty of 50, so we are talking about 300 people in a village of 90 inhabitants. We must concentrate on just making a better school, not a bigger school.... Hadsall House, after library and theatre expansions

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The Inauguration of Villa Monticello My dreams, thè landscape of my mind, have always been filled with beautiful buildings, situated in beautiful settings spread around thè world and always inhabited by hundreds of beautiful young creatures! The first dream—Chalets in Switzerland, then villas in Ticino and Italy, Georgian mansions in England, a Chàteau in France—from 12 young people in my first dream there are 2,000 every year who walk onto my landscape with my hope and blessing that because of them and their time at TASIS thè world becomes a better place to live in. New architects and community fathers come to create new structures, new classrooms and laboratories in England blending in with thè lovely architecture of thè past, and here rises above thè lake of Lugano and in thè hills of thè Ticino another home to house young people, blending in with thè 17th-century buildings and thè tonality of time. In such spirit have we chosen to bridge time and continents in naming this edifice after thè home of one of our greatest Americans— Thomas Jefferson—in spirit a Renaissance man, in courage and character a dauntless pioneer in thè creation of a new nation. MONTICELLO, as he chose to name his home in America, reflected his love of Italy, Europe, and thè old world. Education was so dear to his heart that he wanted to be remembered for only two things in his life...... Author of thè American Declaration of Independence Founder of thè University of Virginia His dream and creation of one of thè fmest

Universities in our land makes thè choice of thè same name he chose for his home an honor we pay to his and our beloved Europe and a dedication to thè highest standards and aspirations that he symbolized in his life and that he transmitted as a heritage to our great country, America. With thanks to our architect, Signor Falconi, and to our Mayor, Signor Riva, and to all thè workmen who have labored with thè creation of this “palazzina,” I now dedicate to young people, to thè future citizens of thè world, this building— VILLA MONTICELLO M. Crist Fleming Founder and Director The American School in Switzerland (Speech delivered on 21 November 1987)

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S I X T I E S

A Dream of a School JVly husband was attending a meeting in

If you think EDUCATION IS EXPENSIVE, TRY IGNORANCE.

Stresa. I took a bus to Lugano and another to Montagnola. An opening event was scheduled at TASIS. That was thirty years ago and Cris Fleming was making certain that ab of thè furniture, flowers, refreshments were ready for guests. Cris had a dream of a school in Montagnola which would educate young people from various places, mostly American, who would learn to speak at least one second language acceptably, and would become well-traveled citizens of thè world. The young people were to be properly dressed, well-scrubbed, and a credit to their school and to their country. TASIS has expanded enormously since that ambitious beginning. The plays put on by thè students, thè exhibits of student art work and photography are always a joy. The travel programs which were made available to thè students and thè dozens of innovative programs at TASIS were trail blazing, and those of us who had thè good fortune to watch Cris Fleming build her academic empire from a handful of students to a major factor on thè European secondary-education scene all have our own favorite memories. Cris has always done things with style. The clothes she wears, thè food she serves, thè ease

with which she switches from English to Italian when her guests are more comfortable in Italian. These are just a few of thè things I remember. Everything Cris has touched, from those days so long ago, has contributed to her vision of one peaceful world where high school students learn those skills which will enable them to contribute to making thè world a friendlier, happier place. When possible I stili attend TASIS graduations, watch Cris kiss thè new graduates, and marvel once again at thè wisdom of her vision, her energy, her high standards for thè young people she has guided for more than three decades. Of all thè women I have met in my lifetime, I consider Cris Fleming one of thè most fascinating, most productive, and most stimulating. She has been a good friend and a fascinating role model. Heartiest congratulations on your 80th birthday, Cris, and best wishes for many more Happy, Healthy, and Productive years, and ever more fascinating projects to develop and to share with faculty, staff, students, and friends of TASIS. Eleanor Gurewitsch Freelance Journalist Schenectady, New York Zurich, Switzerland

Instant Friendship Became Something Like Family Love ^JC^hen we met her we thought her thè most impressive, not to say glamorous woman we’d ever known; and we haven’t changed our minds. It was 30 years ago when we called on thè newly arrived American School in our village of Montagnola to ask if their library could use books and magazines, and thè person we approached at thè gates was Mrs. Fleming. Instant friendship became something like family love. Since then we’ve spent countless happy times together—contented visits— exciting holidays— magnificent “Fleming” occasions; but none so far as splendid as her 80th birthday promises to be. May these happy meetings go on and on. We wish you, dear Cris, with all our hearts, a Wonderful Birthday, and many Happy Years.

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S I X T I E S

Tribute to Mrs. Fleming In thè early 1960s, TASIS had something called “Swiss Holiday.” It was yet another adventure in education that Mrs. Fleming was always creating. And her creations always produced a whirlwind of activity that was exciting, dramatic, and inspirational. With one year of college behind me and an earlier summer exchange to France, I was invited by this creative, inspira­ tional woman to be a counselor at thè 1962 summer Swiss Holiday. The day I arrived she said: ”Quick, take a train to Yugoslavia. One of our expedition buses needs a replacement!” That was my introduction to a pace that never let up.

Four years later, college now complete, I returned to thè recently acquired Villa De Nobili outside Montagnola. This time, thè day I arrived (again as a counselor) I met a fellow counselor, also invited by Mrs. Fleming, who later turned out to become my wife. The excitement, drama, and inspiration of Mrs. Fleming and her ways never cease. Many, many thanks to a most fantastic woman! James Botkin Santa Fe, New Mexico Former counselor, Swiss Holiday

YOU were VOGUE PERSONIFIED! To Mary Crist Fleming—on her very special day and year! We go back a long way together. When we first met, you carne with your parents to thè Headmistresses’ Association meetings, usually held in a big city, or at a resort like Atlantic City. I was always interested in thè Mary Lyon School, since Mount Holyoke College was my alma mater, but you were thè belle of those “balls”, with your beautiful and striking gowns at thè formai dinners. Then there was your Frog Hollow period, when you wore perfect country clothes. I can’t possibly cover in a few sentences your achievements in your schools abroad, starting with TASIS. It was a reai thrill for me to visit

your school in Lugano, thè one time that Vogue, my employer, sent me on a school-visiting trip on thè other side of thè water, in thè fall of 1962. I arrived late, at 8:30 p.m., but was welcomed warmly, in my travelling suit (plaid, I believe), at your perfectly lovely dinner party. I was thè one who worked for Vogue, but YOU were VOGUE PERSONIFIED! My former associates in Vogue’s School Department, Helen Weist and Judith Hine, join me in sending affectionate best wishes on your birthday. Long may you wave!! Cheers and more cheers, Marian Courtney New York City

A Veritable Grande Dame in life one occasionally Comes into contact with someone truly memorable. I suspect that nearly everyone who has ever met Mary Crist Fleming has been lastingly impressed by her vision, energy, and “torpedoes be damned; full speed ahead” manner! Educator, humanist, internationalist, entrepreneur, reai estate genius —Cris Fleming has inspired countless persons with her “everything is possible,” “thè sky is thè limit” spirit. Add to this her insistence on standards and her zest for life and you have a reai personage, a veritable “grande dame.” For good reason, to thè world, TASIS and

Mrs. Fleming are synonymous. I cannot remember an instance when thè subject of TASIS arose that was not quickly pursued by an inquiry about Mrs. Fleming—in essence, “what is she up to now?” While I didn’t always agree with Mrs. Fleming, our differences did not diminish my admiration and respect for her. Like many others, I shall always be grateful for thè opportunities and expanded horizons that TASIS presented. Risk taking was more than a cliché for Cris; it was a way of life—of which I, for one, was a direct benefìciary. Only a reai risk taker—or a damned

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S I X T I E S fool—would have asked me to head TASIS at thè tender age of 25! And I don’t think anyone has ever accused Cris Fleming of being a damned fool. I hope that to some degree her confìdence and trust was justified. While Mary Crist Fleming could have successfully run most any company—and many countries for that matter—how fortunate for severa! generations of students, teachers, and

administrators that she chose to make her mark in education. And what a mark she made—and is stili making! Few can claim such an impact. There is no question, thè world is a better place because of this remarkable, memorable woman. Raymond Robbins Zermatt, Switzerland Former Science teacher and Headmaster, TASIS

If You Can Walk with Kings ^Vho would have thought that as you shared a very simple spaghetti dinner (without wine!) in our little one-room apartment in Cambridge that winter night in 1961, it would be thè beginning of such a long friendship? Certainly thè three of us sitting around that table—on two chairs and thè corner of thè bed, as I recali—didn’t. I often think of that evening— and of our naivete and your graciousness. I’m reminded of Kipling’s “If’ and thè line, “__ If you can walk with kings, nor lose thè common touch__ ” Certainly you had walked with kings, but you made us feel as though spaghetti was your favorite dish and we your best friends. In retrospect, thè subsequent seven years in Lugano seem to have gone so quickly. I had thè idea of doing something with thè library and you gave me “carte bianche.” I learned lots and I think I gave a bit of order to thè books that were there. Kris and Heather were both born during those years, and you were there with care and concern and gifts. You didn’t know that you were “family,” did you? And our lovely home__ How I hated to leave Arasio when Ray made thè decision to return to thè States! Special dinners, evenings in your home, vacations in Uzes, parties at thè beach house__ It is fun to let thè memory run—with so many happy thoughts.

For me, Cris, in so many, many ways you became (though you didn’t know it!) a valuable role model. To Grosse Pointe I took your high standards and perhaps made a mark there because of them. The physical plant of Univer­ sity Liggett School became a showpiece—and to a large extent because I kept pushing and believing that it could be done. Beauty is important in life. Caring is important. And people tend to respond to and respect that which is and those who do! I think our fifteen years in Grosse Pointe lcft ULS—and our community involvements—better for our having been there. Little did they know from whence carne thè inspiration! I did! And our getting re-acquainted again in 1984 with our stay in Capitignano—a relaxed time, with a little “antiquing” in Arezzo and “memorable” meals__ TASIS Suisse Romande sadly was not meant to be, but even that was a “learning experience”—and not a bad one!— for all of us. Best of all, it brought us back together! Thanks for thè memories, Cris! Let’s keep making them! Lenita Robbins Zermatt, Switzerland Former Librarian, TASIS

__In thè early 60’s I was also eyeing a gorgeous property near thè Montagnola campus, especially and exclusively for thè Post Graduate Program. I had been to thè States several months before to borrow thè money to purchase it, but when I returned and prepdred to meet thè owner of that property, Mr. Joos, he raised thè price a few hundred thousand francs for thè carpets and thè gilded crystal chandeliers. He had already been a difficult man to deal ivith, but I was so angered by his changing thè agreement at thè last moment that I called my lawyer to accompany me to look once more at another villa I had seen. I fell in love with that villa all over again (I had visited it several years earlier), and with cash in handfrom my Stateside trip, I bought thè Villa Negrotti that afternoon before five o’clock in thè year of our Lord 1962. It is probably thè most beautiful villa in Lugano and made a wonderful campus for our Post Graduate Program and later Fleming College. I eventually sold it to thè town of Lugano, when we Consolidated thè school onto thè

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S I X T I E S enlarged campus in Montagnola. I owned Villa Negroni for at least IO years and completely modernized it. I had to put in all thè bathrooms, because it was built in thè 17th century. Happily there was space for bathrooms because they had large tin tubs, and servants who carne in and poured water over them for baths. In fact I stili have some of those tubs—they are wonderful for ice and beer, and chilled wine! At least thè space was there so we could put in all thè bathrooms for American students and thè heating System, which wasn’t easy. Jerry Wells, who restored my house, and is now head of thè Cornell Architectural School, did all thè planning, and very ingenious planning it was, because thè whole heating System had to go under thè villa. You couldn’t possibly destroy a historical monument with functional items like a heating System!

Villa Negroni—thè most beautiful villa in Lugano

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S I X T I E S It was all a challenge and I’m afraid I always need a challenge. Making something beautiful is very important to me. The challenge of Villa Negroni was to restore something basically beautiful, which had been allowed to run down, into a living building and place again. It was very successful. We filled it with students for years and they loved it because, coming from America, old historical buildings are part of thè reason they come to Europe. The Belle Arte didn’t interfere with my restoration because I was more fussy than they in preserving thè authenticity of thè Villa.

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S I X T I E S The Constant need of a challenge—sounds like a disease, doesn’t it? As well as thè renovating, decorating, and thè organizing side of a new school, there is thè social side of it, getting to know thè Mayor and thè locai people. It is very important to have thè support of locai people, particularly for a school of young Americans where locai citizens question whether thè students are going to be a cultural disturbarne to thè community, especially in a small community. I guess I enjoy thè challenge of anything you must do to make something successful. You might as well enjoy all aspects....

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_______

____

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After All, thè Relationship Between a Customer and Her Banker Is Supposed to Be Confidential

Freedom is not

A MATTER OF EASE BUT OF INTENSE DISCIPLINE. Bole

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There are many, many people who know Cris Fleming as I do. All of us love her and respect her. Working with her—just talking with her— gave thè dullest person thè faith in anything being possible. But write a hook and relate thè experiences of someone like myself? Would thè average person believe thè things she accomplished against what to me seemed impossible odds? I am sure most would read it as fiction. Cris would know it was true. We who knew her, know her and worked with her, would read it as true. Our relationship all began at least thirty years ago. That’s a long time! A mutuai acquaintance introduced Cris Fleming to me. And I sensed at thè time she was probably brought to my office because hearing what she wanted to do that mutuai friend considered I was thè only banker who would even listen to her pian. I was known as a brash young freethinking banker. And I probably was. But I worked for what was then a most conservative banking house—thè Harris Bank. The program she had laid out for herself was perfectly straightforward—in her mind. A beautiful villa was on thè market in Lugano. It would make a splendid facility for a school. The American School in Switzerland was already off and running. This villa would answer another need—a college-level campus. The fact that there was a deadline of weeks in which to act, that there were no places in Switzerland at that time which would lend money on such property irrespective of thè worth of thè borrower or thè property, and that she had little or no money to commit to either buying thè villa or fìnancing thè start up of another school simply was not germane— in her mind. She bought thè villa. She started thè new school. And like everybody else who has come to know her I helped put it all together. Of course, I couldn’t go to a conservative bank in thè Middle West and explain to thè board I had a lady at my desk from Pennsylvania who ran a school in Lugano, Switzerland and wanted to buy a villa nearby and start another school. They would have fìrst asked where Lugano was—or perhaps even have asked where Switzerland was. They knew where Penn­

sylvania was and stili is. You must remember this was in thè 1950’s!! Gary, Indiana was a long way from thè Chicago Loop. Among those who believed in Cris Fleming were many. And I knew if they had any money they too were or would be scared to death placing their money anywhere offshore. We devised a scheme whereby an escrow was established in a Washington, D.C. bank. A more sophisticated bank. A bank where thè board was made up of men who knew where Switzerland was, but maybe had never been to Lugano. Into this escrow these friends of Cris’s deposited shares of listed companies as collateral. They could continue to draw thè dividend in­ come and even trade in thè shares. However, it was understood they would replace any shares withdrawn from thè escrow with shares of equal quality and value. Against this collateral it was arranged in Switzerland to draw down suffìcient funds with which to buy thè villa. Later she was able to arrange refìnancing and thè escrow was dissolved. Cris had her villa and she started thè new venture. Through thè years I learned never to be surprised from whence she might cali. Usually only to explore an idea or probably a problem. Sometimes I would be told thè details—if she felt it necessary. Sometimes she just wanted a devil’s advocate. The cali could come from New York, London, Paris, Lugano, and later even Sydney! Other times she would drop in to thè Chicago area. We might have dinner. But whatever or wherever, it was usually her desire to work through thè possibilities for resolving some issue. And as thè years went by thè calls were less frequent. After all, such discussions with all thè people she could cali on as time went by made her more self-reliant. All she ever needed was thè seed of an idea. Believe me—people like myself enjoy and appreciate working with such selfstarters and doers. Often we help and then become a rather permanent crutch. In thè fifties Cris was a rare person—and, besides, she was a lady! Women did not do what she accomplished. They did not attempt to do such outlandish things. One big reason was we men were not prepared to assist women—most women, that is. I don’t think it ever occured to me or


S I X T I E S

anyone else not to help Cris Fleming. But I am sure many others like myself could never attempt to explain to someone who had never met her why we were helping Cris. I love her, you love her... we all love her. It is astounding to realize Mary Crist Fleming is an octagenarian. They are OLD! She never will be old.

Give Cris a big hug and a squeeze and a kiss for me. Sorry you can’t use what I have related. After all, thè relationship between a customer and her banker is supposed to be confidential! Bayard Sheldon Whitianga, New Zealand

Montagnola Nights Th e phone rang insistently. That could mean only one thing: “The boss” was on thè other end. If it wasn’t “The boss” thè phone rang less authoritatively, more pleadingly, more— how shall we say—more respectfully. More as if a Swiss were on thè other end, which was usually thè case. But when it was 7:45 a.m. and thè ring was more like a fìre bell than a gentle church tocsin, Mellon knew two things: one, it was MCF for damned sure, and two, he’d better get thè gravelly sound out of his voice, what Wells aptly called “thè morning after thè night at thè Della Santa voice” and sound, bright, perky, well-slept, well-fed, well—well reasonably well-dressed and above all “on thè job.” This early October morn, thè job meant running thè post-grad program of TASIS, ready to share breakfast and news of thè EEC with his charges—some of thè blonds were more like depth charges, but that was another story—all 30 of these wretched of thè earth from Scarsdale, Winnetka, Grosse Point, Englewood, and Beverly Hills who had run away from deprivation for a year to find themselves in thè hills where thè Sound of Music inspired them to work softly, play hardly, consume inordinate amounts of Birra Lugano, Tobler chocolates, and above all with diligence and devotion find ROMANCE, thè ever elusive but stili sought, sweet pleasures of thè Big R. God, maybe that’s what MCF wanted. Maybe some of thè wretches had not only found thè big R but had been practicing it. Mellon groaned as he reached for thè phone. Johnson and Nugent? My God. T. B. and Serena? Never. They defined platonic. Lana and Marty? No, they preferred horses. Block and Betsy. Yeah. That’s it. Always thè two quietest. Well, thè storks, I mean thè stocks, for them! “Scuola Americana, bum giorno, Capo Gruppo, Seconda Classe, Mellone, chi parla?” “Buon giorno yourself. How many times have I told you to speak American or Graf gets

David Mellon and Jerry Wells discussing and pondering developments at Villa Negroni

your lunch. Anyhow, I’m glad—and somewhat surprised—you’re up and around, not to say cheerful, happy, cogent, and phonily Italian so early in thè morning.” So far so good, thought Capo Gruppo Seconda Classe Mellone. She sounds like she got a good night’s sleep herself. “Sorry about thè Italian, but I was expecting a cali from thè Pope and... what, uh, can I do for you. Nothing serious I hope” (and hope and hope). “No, nothing serious, but I wanted to catch you early to see if you and Nancy had any plans this evening. You see, m’dear, thè new Bishop of Gibraltar is coming over, and I wondered__ ” Mellone breathed a sigh of relief which could well have awakened thè permanent residents of thè Sant’ Abbondio graveyard. Good old Block, good old Johnson, good old Teebers, and God love DeWitt, Dungan, Larsen, and Garrison. Fine fellows all. They stili knew—they had leamed from him—how to keep their “R”ing to themselves. “Why, Boss, we’d be delighted. Seven? Fine. Best bib

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and tuck? Oh, thè Thyssens and thè Karl Heinz Boehms, Prince Philip you say, thè Kennedys and Ros. Jerry and Adele. The Bigelows. Ray and Lenita. Rosaria and Graf. Tom, Gay, Lynn, and John Miele, Jim Durham. Marco Grassi with thè Principessa. The Mayor and Mayorette of Florence and thè head of thè Italian Communist Party. O.K. DeGaulle? You’re kidding. No kidding. Best bib and tuck. Gotcha. We’ll be there. Ciao. Sorry I mean so long.” Montagnola Nights. He would, as years passed, always think of them as Montagnola Nights. “La Notte di Montagnola” as Felini might have put it. The narrow winding road leading to thè villa; thè very road where Lynn had terrifìed thè entire locai population as she careened in her Kharmen Ghia (Italian for Volkswagen) night after screeching night scaring thè beejesus out of everything in sight. Yes, thè Cypress Trees, thè tranquil village of Gentilino where Wells thè resident American architect about town had Jerry built his studio with thè stunning Adele. Ah, Montagnola nights. Past thè church, into thè turn, thè Lynn-inspired mirror to assure thè wary she wasn’t coming thè other way. Thence to thè great building itself, like its Mistress, formidable, imposing, vaguely aristocratic and withal hospitable, inviting, appealing in thè grand manner, all grace outside with good booze inside. The gathering evening glittered resplendent like thè guest list. The garden was alive with thè cocktail driven chatter of diverse tongues, English of course and Italian natch. But French as well, a dash of Romansch and most mellifluously thè gentle tinkle of Schweizerdeutsch, thè language of thè gods it was said and more importantly of your locai banker. At thè very center in this garden of earthly delights stood in full form, full view, her Omnipresence, founder, owner, Director and Task Mistress prima classe, thè one and only redoubtable MCF. Even Mellon, used to MCF shindigs, knew this was “a special,” a “black girdle night.” By God, there was DeGaulle chatting pontifìcally with Liberato. Jack and Jackie en route would soon be en croute, would arrive at any minute. The best crystal gleamed. The stars matched it. The wind, gentle off thè hills, heightened thè sweet talk of Ticino this early autumn of 1962. Positioned behind thè shàllow pool in thè inner courtyard Madame Hostess carried four different conversations to ever greater heights in three different languages. Ros laughed,

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Durham chuckled, Heinie tittered. “Ah, Signor Mellone, vuole un po di salmone?” It was thè ever attentive, smiling, gracious Rosaria. Graf barked his delight as thè great black limo swept off thè road, onto thè driveway, and regally carne to a halt by thè great Lombard poplar known locally as thè Leschetsko Tree—no one knew why. And out stepped thè Great Guest of Honor, a mitre in one hand, a bust of Queen Victoria in thè other, clad imposingly in bishopric black. With a hint of purple at thè edges and a crimson garter for his gaiters. Sniffingly he advanced, out of thè car, across thè path, past thè gate. Madam through years of training carne to her most regai position, adjusted her famous decolletage to its appropriate-for-a-bishop level and in perfect Philadelphian said, “My Dear Good Bishop, welcome to our humble abode this splendid night.” She stretched her manicured hand, and thè Bishop, cocksure of himself, marched forward to kiss it, eyes cast heavenward as was his wont and walked right into thè wading pool, right up to and beyond those crimson gaiters. The gasp from thè notables was palpable. The Principessa fainted into Prince Philip’s arms. Only two people maintained complete decorum and self-possession. DeGaulle and Madam F. who, without batting an eye, step­ ped graciously into thè pool herself and said: “My Dear Bishop, as you are so obviously wet on thè outside, shall we go for broke and do thè same for thè inside? Rosaria, per favore, due martini Americani, molto secco, Rosie, molto secco! We shall begin thè festivities by drying ourselves from thè inside out. The rest of you are encouraged to do thè same. Especially you, Charles. Vive la France, Vive LAngleterre. ” And a potentially catastrophic entrance set thè tone instead for thè best coming in and getting out party any Bishop of Gibraltar ever had in thè whole memorable history of Montagnola Nights at Casa Fleming. To this day, thè term “a game of pool” takes on a completely different meaning in thè South of Switzerland from any other place in thè world which is, after all, entirely appropriate as Montagnola was always different, really and truly enchantingly different, from any other place in thè whole, big, rest of thè world. Ian David Mellon Chicago, Illinois Former Director, TASIS Post Graduate Program


s

I X T I E S

We All Suddenly Became Aware of a Presence Into a hall blazing with chandeliers some hundreds of us were listening to an address of welcome by thè Lebanese Foreign Minister. The place was Beirut and thè date was November 1962. As thè speech droned on we all suddenly became aware of “a presence.” Into thè hall, 15 minutes later and trailing a Mink stole, swept an electric personality—who— Mary Crist Fleming! It took just enough time for Cris to reach thè rostrum and be greeted by thè Minister for many of us to fall in love with her “on sight”. Her personality, after all, is just a little bit special__ At that conference, so long ago, a handful of us founded E.C.I.S. (European Council of In­ ternational Schools), and its teething troubles (many), at our half yearly meetings were cushioned by thè continuous hospitality and generosity of Mary Crist at her beautiful Palazzo Negroni in Lugano. Years passed and our friendship with thè whole Fleming clan increased when one day Stephen Eckard and I, co-founders of thè American School of London in 1951, received a surprise telephone cali from Cris suggesting a quick visit to us “for advice.” Should TASIS open an English branch? Yes! was our joint and spontaneous reply. If you will include a boarding section. OK but where? You two are retired and know thè English ropes better than anybody. Why don’t you go to work and find me a suitable location? After six months and many hundreds of miles which included one country estate of

Cris and Gai Fleming visiting Steve Eckard

-___ _ several thousand acres, 90 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, to numerous tottering London mausoleums, we then landed up on a cold dark November night at Thorpe Place. We had “landed.” No question. It is to beloved Cris that I offer this little tribute. Throughout thè 18 years of our friend­ ship, she has maintained a standard of courage, loyalty, and generosity that has no equal; without her spirit, charm and affection thè world would lose much. May this great occasion be one of many and may God bless and protect her always. Peter Waller f (written in 1980) “At that conference a handful of us founded E.C.I.S.''—Steve Eckard is on left with Peter Waller to thè left of Cris Fleming, thè “founding mother’’ of E.C.I.S.

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Ode On thè Occasion of thè Celebration of thè Eightieth Natal Day of Mary Crist Fleming There are loads of odes to notable dames, But most don’t teli ya a lot: “Portrait of a Lady” says less about her Than it does about T. S. El-yot.

Who were preaching free will and thè Pelagian heresy And trying to get Ernie Manino To give them a grant if they promised to plant One on Manino’s mafioso Latinos.

Shakespeare’s “dark lady” might well be a boy, And thè Bless’d Damozel’s a right funny one; And for all that you got ’bout thè Lady of Shalott She could have been a spring on-i-on.

What firn! What feasts! Some acted like beasts In thè halls of thè Villa Negroni, While Don Phillips pounded thè ivories and spewed An endless stream of baloney.

And then there are odes of a different sort, To another kind of a heroine: Brilliant leaders, relentless in battle— But only a fool would marry one!

Ah, those were thè days, sweet innocent days— Pre-Intemational Baccalaureate, No unions for staff, no audited books, And more—but I will not bore you yet

’Cause who’d go for hitching with Helen of Troy, Number Ten’s Maggie, Jeanne d Are— All of them ladies with manifest talents, And a bite even worse than their bark!

With tales of thè past and thè frantic antics (Which no-one must now be condemning) Of that frolicsome crew and their matchless doyenne, Our own Mary Crist Fleming,

But thè lady we hymn is something else: She has all of those damsels beat hollow— And if it’s chapter and verse you want, Just hark to thè stanzas which follow.

Who understood more, without being a bore, About international education Than all of thè experts and gurus combined— And could teli you sans pontifìcation.

Though it wasn’t thè head of Zeus that produced her, She surely sprang forth full grown From some remarkable line of descent— Though God knows she’s nobody’s clone!

And how did she learn it? Whoever knows!?!?! But it’s got to be thè eighth wonder That starting with not much but an infallible touch (The hell with thè occasionai blunder!)

But she leamed about schools from thè inside out, And those lessons have never forsaken her: She knows all about teachers and students and lessons, And only a Trustee could slaken her...

From thè halls of Lugano to thè shores of Kifissia, Not forgetting that village near Staines, An empire has risen, that miraculous TASIS! How again? It’s got to be brains...

Energy, charm and endless involvement In all of thè scene academe. But not a word, please, about Boards of Trustees, Lest you hear her obscenely blaspheme.

And hard work and guts, a wee bit of luck, And knowing when push Comes to shove! But it wouldn’t have happened if she hadn’t known, too, About thè importance of love.

But now let me recali here Sjpring ’Sixty-three And thè founding of ECIS, When Harrison, Paterson, Mattern and Knox Were mucking about in a mess

That’s why we’re here in our thousands tonight In body or mind, from wherever... And to thank you, dear Cris, for thè gift of yourself That will live in our hearts forever:

As Denyer and Eckard and Clivaz and Chapman Were falling about on their keisters In a valiant attempt to stop Brother Moran From attacking three Marymount sisters

You’ve raised all our sights, made broad our horizons, Lightened our burdens with laughter, So across all thè years, through our smiles and our tears, “Happy Birthday! Long fife hereafter!” Gray Mattern Godalming, Surrey Former Director, ECIS

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Gray Mattern and Mrs. Fleming inaugurate Thorpe Hall at TASIS England

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I Was in thè Hands of an Expert My friend Julia and I with car and driver were on our way from Milan to Lugano where I had an 11:00 o’clock appointment with Mrs. Mary Crist Fleming, Director (and owner) of The American School in Switzerland. Julia, never one to overlook an opportunity to enjoy gourmet foods and—perhaps—wishing to cairn my nerves, suggested that we pian to lunch at thè famous Villa D’Este on thè way back to Milan after my Interview. This seemed an inspired idea and we agreed to do it. Our driver, an effìcient man, deposited me at thè big school main gates exactly on time. I was there at last after several months of correspondence. Leaving Julia in thè car, I entered thè campus walking along thè little roadway. There was no one in sight. I learned later it was final examination time and thè students were either taking exams or studying for them. I soon saw a charming little building off to thè right. The door was open so I stepped inside to find a young English girl there, Pepita Jacquet. She greeted me and assuming that my appointment concerned a prospective student offered to take me to Mrs. Fleming. On thè way she walked

me through Villa De Nobili to see thè salon and marvel at thè ancient armory in thè dining room. At Mrs. Fleming’s home, Pepita turned me over to Rosaria who smiled her Italian welcome. Mrs. Fleming was not there but was expected any minute. As I was a little warm in a wool suit and stili a little nervous to boot, I elected to wait in thè charming little garden somewhat to Rosaria’s distress. It was a pleasant place to collect my thoughts. Very shortly I heard thè rhythmic tapping of high heels and Cris, tali and handsome, hurried through thè carport gate. She was carrying two small antique lamps but none-the-less greeted me most cordially. She took me to her salon (where I should have been in thè first place) and excused herself to dispose of thè lamps. Just about then an attractive young girl carrying school books (about a senior I judged) carne in. It was Lynn Fleming hoping to study to thè accompaniment of thè fine record player I saw there. Cris returned and we gracefully retreated to thè study across thè hall. The music started softly—a well known symphony, and Cris and I settled down to talk. I thought we hit it off

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Cris and Gai Fleming, Michael Aeschliman and Pat Lytel enjoying

quite well from thè start but I could teli I was in thè hands of an expert. She offered me a gin and tonic which I accepted gratefully and after one sip totally forgot. I soon fell under thè speli of this charismatic lady and found myself striving hard to make a good impression. After a bit Cris asked me to stay for lunch and included Julia. We had a happy chatty time. I’m sure thè food was delicious but afterwards couldn’t recali a single bite. After lunch we adjourned to across thè road to see Hadsall House and admire thè view of Lake Lugano

a Capitignano lunch

from thè terrace. But that was not to be thè end of our visit. Using our car and driver Cris took us to Vezia to see thè magnificent Villa Negroni. The Villa was being readied for thè Post Graduate students who would come in thè fall. Workmen were everywhere but we explored it all, even thè grounds which had been planted with exotic trees by thè originai owner. What a perfect place it was for a group of high school graduates to spend an extra year studying and trayelling in Europe. What a wonderful day it was and one I shall never forget—to see and appreciate two fine campuses but most of all to meet for thè first time one of thè most outstanding and gracious persons I have ever known. Villa D’Este hadn’t stood a chance. As it turned out, that day in late May of 1963 was a prologue to an association that extended for ten years at thè school (plus several subsequent summer stints) and a 27-years-long friendship. Pat Lytel San Rafael, California Former Director of Admissions, TASIS

Overseas Study—The Breather Year I was lying in a hospital bed recovering from appendicitis when it occurred to me I didn’t have thè foggiest notion what college was all about,” recalls Robert Watkins, a graduate of St. George’s prep school in Newport, R.I. “I wasn’t ready.” Some 4,000 miles away in Lugano, southernmost city in Switzerland, Mrs. Mary Crist Fleming, 54, was pondering a related idea. “Every bit of extra maturity and training a high school graduate can get before entering college is going to help,” she said. “They need a breather, a chance to get excited again about learning.” These two attitudes mesh so nicely that Watkins, son of thè Providence Journal’s publisher, is now attending Mrs. Fleming’s unique precollege travel and European studies program at her American School in Switzerland. A Radcliffe graduate who wanted to give her three children both a European experience and preparation for a U.S. college, Mrs. Fleming nine years ago opened her own high school in a 17th century cobblestone Lugano villa. It now has 100 students, all Americans. Yet Mrs. Fleming stili

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felt that her “students were not getting as much out of Europe as they should.” So she thought up thè idea of a breather year. IN A COAL MINE The pian lets U.S. high school graduates, free from all thè pressures of being graded, alternately study in thè relaxed resort city of Lugano and travel through Europe to quiz politicians, industrialists, cultural leaders, university students. "American students carit afford to be simply tourists—that day is over,” explains thè energetic director of thè program, Ian D. Mellon, 31, an M.A. from New York University. The program’s 88 students recently finished a two-week swing through Belgium and northeastern France. Their two dark green buses had carried them to Common Market headquarters in Brussels, a coal mine at Lens in northern France, thè offices of UNESCO, Le Figaro, Le Monde and Paris-Match in Paris, Council of Europe headquarters in Strasbourg. As one bus rolled through Brussels a faculty member barraged thè students with questions.


S I X T I E S

“Who recently introduced thè lower bank rate in France?” A student’s correct answer: “Valéry Giscard d’Estaing.” “Why?” “To spur invest­ ment.” At thè International School of Brussels, U.S. executives of Ford, I.TT., Monsanto and Upjohn got a grilling from thè students: “Why are Germany’s gold reserves going down when its economy is booming?” “What marketing research have you done in Europe on orai contraceptives?” In Paris, thè Americans met Gaullist students to discuss thè mysteries of thè world’s teen-agers and thè mystique of Charles de Gaulle. AT THE BOLSHOI In earlier trips thè youngsters had visited Lisbon and Tangier, explored an Olivetti fac­ tory near Naples, toured thè Brolio winery in Florence, quizzed their way through East and West Berlin, Vienna, Prague, Munich. During spring vacation, some of thè Americans talked

with students at Moscow University, attended thè Bolshoi Theater. Back at Lugano, a lively faculty (average age: 28) related thè tour experiences to such required courses as contemporary Europe, European literature, logie, and composition, French and Italian languages. The cost of this education is high—about $5,000 for thè year, including all thè trips. The school shuns “unstable problem students,” and “thè oversophisticated,” but welcomes lateblooming students whose high school grades may not have been tops. Yale-bound Jeff Graham, 17, son of a Michigan equipment manufacturer, sums up thè experience: “At Exeter I did well, but had no great enthusiasm. I was in a sort of academic mud bog, but here something seemed to catch. This place has brought a lot of us out of our little tiny shells.” Reprinted from TIME, May 28, 1965

Quality

in

HIGHER EDUCA­ TION WILL ALWAYS COME OR NOT COME ACCORD­ INO TO WHAT ONE STUDENT AT A TIME UNDER THE INSPIRATION OF SOME TEACHER WHO UNDERSTANDS HIM CAN

"Mrs. Fleming is quite a woman... ,she really makes you feel that you're thè important one—you 're thè one that’s going to make history. It’s really something."

BE INSPIRED TO MAKE OF HIS CAPABILITIES.

Cindy Crabtree Former student of thè TASIS Post Graduate Program (from a letter to her mother written in 1965) "For years I have thought of writing you and thanking you for thè wonderful opportunities I had at TASIS. But not until this year did I realize what a profound effect it had on shaping my attitudes and perspectives. "Exposure to thè many cultures we carne in contact with taught tolerance of humanity and I find that that is precisely what I want for my four children too.... "So many times in life we touch someone and never really know thè effect we have. I just wanted you to know." Marilee Telfer Luttig TASIS Post Graduate student, 1965 (written in 1989)

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s

An Ever-Changing “Salon”

Manners

are of

MORE IMPORTANCE THAN LAWS. UPON THEM, IN A GREAT MEASURE, THE LAWS DEPEND. THE LAW TOUCHES US BUT HERE AND THE RE, AND NOW AND THEN. MANNERS ARE WHAT VEX OR

There were a number of things about thè remarkable Mrs. Fleming which a young Fiorentine—albeit American schooled—painting restorer had to notice upon meeting her in Lugano circa 1965. First and foremost were her two unusually attractive daughters. Not far behind, carne her splendid and spirited “attack” on all things, and there were many, that gravitated within her orbit: thè gusto and humor which she lavished on people, ideas, things, that were worthy—even, occasionally im-worthy—of her polyhedral attentions were astounding. In this, she displayed a form of generosity that has become in particularly short supply among thè more self-obsessed generations of this gloomy ‘fin de siede’. Memorable feature of this exuberance was thè uncanny ability to commit instantly to memory names, relationships, professional and social qualifications of any of thè myriad guests that ceaselessly partook of her boundless hospitality at Villa de Nobili. It was an ever-changing ‘salori over which she presided with effortless grace, conjuring up at a moment’s notice seatings for a dozen or more for breakfast, lunch, tea, and dinner—everyone’s i.d. and c.v., of course (even thè remotest friend-of-friend), faultlessly

remembered and contextually correct. While this was, naturally, a ceaseless source of wonder for someone more used to a social environment wherein blasé aloofness was cultivated as an art form, thè supreme mystery for this observer was that amid all thè warmth, spontaneity, cordiality and good cheer radiating from our hostess, never, ever was she for anyone anything but__ Mrs. Fleming. Could someone whisper “Cris” with impunity?... unconscionable! ”Mary” with temerity?... one’s imagination withers at thè thought! And so, thè paradox persists—while thè subject of our admiration may, in these intervening years, have become just a trifle more blasé, and this admirer maybe a trifle less; all thè foregoing comments could, indeed should, be read very much in thè present tense... thè splendid gusto, ever more robust; thè ‘salori ever more varied; thè memory and curiosity ever more uncanny__ now, more than ever Mrs. Fleming, now more than ever: VIVA LA SIGNORA FLEMING! Abbracci a tutti! Marco Grassi Art Restorer, New York City

SOOTHE, CORRUPT OR PURIFY, EXALT OR DEBASE, BAR­ BARIE OR REFINE US, BUT BY A CON­ STANT, STEADY, UNIFORM, INSENSIBLE OPERATION, LIKE THAT OF THE AIR WE BREATHE IN. THEY GIVE

Overheard A

father calls up thè school and reaches thè Director herself. “This is Alexander Hamilton speaking.” Without hesitation Cris Fleming quips back, “Well, this is Betsy Ross.” And then thè father asks to speak with his son. It

took some rather fast back-pedalling when MCF realized that ‘Alexander Hamilton’ really was thè father’s name. Editor

THEIR WHOLE FORM AND COLOR TO OUR LIVES. ACCORDING TO THEIR QUALITY, THEY AID MORALS, THEY SUPPLY THEM, OR THEY TOTALLY DESTROY THEM. Burke, 1797

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.... After renovating Villa Negrotti I started getting restless again. Even Switzerland seemed a bit small. I started thinking about France. I discovered an adorable, small 12th-century chateau called La Boissiere, in Provence. Always loving France, as I did, I started a summer program there, called Sumtner School in France, and later Le Chateau des Enfants. The chateau was near a small town called Uzes, which is thè Premier Duche of France. It was charming and was built by a man who went to thè Crusades. The chateau had crenelated towers, an inner courtyard, and a small river fowing below it. La Boissiere went very well in thè summer time, but a summer program is very different from a winter program. Economically, to have a program succeed on your own property, you have to have at least ten months of occupancy. There is no way that you can survive with a two-month or three-month summer program and maintain a prop­ erty for twelve months. We tried one year to have a school there in Uzes, but it was not successful since thè property felt particularly isolated in thè winter; so I sold thè property and we expanded our facilities in Lugano....


S I X T I E S

Chateau de la Boissiere

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Well-Timed Shake of Her Multibangled Wrist I suppose it was inevitable from my fìrst day at Frog Hollow Farm in 1948 that Mary Flem­ ing would become one of thè great influences in my life. After several Flemingless summers I returned to thè fold in 1965 as a student at thè Summer School in France. It was thè fìrst year for SSIF at La Boissiere, for thè grand opening of which Mrs. Fleming had invited thè Duchess of Uzes and her nonagenarian “houseguest,” former Prime Minister Paul Reynaud. A handful of us, whose French was not quite as bad as thè rest, were assigned to greet thè dignitaries. I relished thè task because I knew a little about Reynaud’s less than spectacular career and his notorious involvement with another French noblewoman, Helene Comtesse de Portes, a liaison which may have hastened thè French collapse of 1940. Somehow sensing thè direction my questioning of thè old gentleman was taking, Mrs. Fleming broke my concentration with one well-timed shake of her multibangled wrist, saving both of us from any further embarrassment. I had been

egged on by one of thè French staff members, a brilhant student of politics at thè Sorbonne and thus, by defìnition, somewhere to thè left of Leon Trotsky. Mrs. Fleming could not abide thè man. I thought he was a twentieth-century Rousseau. The French survived two summers of my assaults on their language and culture. I had become a confìrmed Francophile; so much of one that I married a French teacher. Mrs. Flem­ ing was thus indirectly responsible for thè best decision I have ever made. In thè late 1960s, [my wife] Lynne and I hosted two of thè legendary TASIS alumni spaghetti dinners. Despite thè small size of our homes and thè amateurism with which we cooked thè pasta, Mrs. Fleming pronounced our efforts a success—an encouragement to which we trace our current reputation for never throwing parties for fewer than fifty people. Both Lynne and I returned to SSIF as counselor/teachers in 1970. We met thè challenges of an inebriated Hawaiian student

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S I X T I E S

An optimist is a MAN WHO LOOKS AFTER YOUR EYES AND A PESSIMIST IS A MAN WHO LOOKS AFTER YOUR FEET. Little girl

hulaing on a “Cite Universitaire” balcony; thè nephew of thè Sheik of Kuwait with thè briefcase full of travelers cheques and thè talent for picking locks; a VW bus which caught fìre not once, but twice; and thè insouciance of teenagers for whom thè chateaux of thè Loire could not hold a candle to discotheques. If we could survive these tests, we could certainly teach secondary and post-secondary students in stationary classrooms. So, Mrs. Fleming was in part responsible for reaffirming our vocations. Mrs. Fleming believes in American education and in encouraging young Americans to

rediscover their European cultural roots. Somewhere between Frog Hollow and La Boissiere she must have convinced me too, because that is what both Lynne and I try to do today. Her influence has touched our thousands of students and, in thè next genera­ tion, will touch tens of thousands more. Wally Bacon Omaha, Nebraska Former camper, Frog Hollow Farm, Student, then teacher, Summer School in France

Dumb-Struck As We See Where She Has Led Us

“She could captivate an audience of any age”

106

1 hinking back over our years at TASIS, there are two images of MCF that both Michele and I remember vividly. The fìrst is thè way she could captivate an audience of any age with her oratory. I stili see her, at thè end of a session of CDE, surrounded by a spell-bound audience of 6 to 12 year olds as she tells them about her dream, a dream of tolerance, a dream of thè people of thè world living together in harmony, and how by bringing children of many nationalities together in a program such as Le Chateau des Enfants she was fostering this dream. In her narrative she would often turn to thè parentonlookers and describe thè humble beginnings of thè program in thè Provence. She would teli them how she had to borrow children from thè

printer, thè business manager and thè caretaker, which brings me to my second image, that of our crazy trip from Lugano to France to begin thè program. The departure rime had been set for 9 a.m. but MCF had a few last minute things to attend to so we finally set off in two cars with our only two paying children at 11:30. She was with Bob Wilson in her very sporty Lancia Fulvia leading thè way and we were following behind in my little Morris 1300 that developed a very annoying steering wheel wobble whenever we tried to go above 70 mph. I dorit know how but I managed to keep up—charging (for me) along thè autostrada, twisting and turning through thè klaxoning traffìc of Turin and on


S I X T I E S

to thè long, straight, country road that led to thè Alps. By this time we were all feeling hungry, hot and tired and were wondering when we would stop for lunch. Suddenly, without warning, thè Lancia veered to thè left up a tiny dirt track and into thè most idyllic meadow, with a cool cluster of trees and a little babbling brook where our two young wards could paddle. No sooner stopped than things started to appear from thè Lancia; rugs for thè ground, hampers of food, cold soft drinks for thè children, a bucket of ice, and above all thè bar. ”1 think we all need a little refresher dears, don’t you?” So it was gin and tonics all round (except for thè children). Quelle mise en scene! After lunch it was up and over thè Col de Montgenevre, down into Briancon and while thè cars were refuelled at a gas station so were we, with another light refresher from thè bar which seemed to appear by magic on thè boot of thè Lancia. A stop for dinner outside • Avignon and then thè last dash along dusty, dark, tree-lined roads that were like long endless tunnels. Close to midnight we finally pulì into a drive and are dumb-struck as we see where she has led us, her jewel of a medieval castle “Le Chateau de la Boissiere.”

Mrs. Fleming congrat-

John and Michele Watson Luxembourg Former Directors, Le Chateau des Enfants Former Science and French teachers, TASIS

ulates John Watson at thè close of another wonderful Chateau des Enfants performance

Wouldn’t It Be Wonderful If One Could Take Those 700 Chateaux and Turn Them All into Schools? My daughter says chateaux become me. My Business Manager says it’s an affectation, meaning more likely an aberration! I admit I have a weakness for chateaux and have gone through two already and am currently hoping a third will drop in my lap. It’s not that I want to be a chatelaine with lots of keys jangling around my waist. It’s because I think, with thè exception of thè plumbing, that chateaux are wonderful places in which to instali schools. My family and my friends became a little worried when they heard that just in thè province of Bourgogne in France there are 700 chateaux. I’d like to get there before Hilton or thè Trust Houses Forte, but I am restraining myself. It’s thè beauty of thè surroundings, thè fairy-tale feeling letting your imagination run wild, thè tranquility conducive to meditation and study, thè history within thè walls, thè animai world and nature all around you, which make most chateaux perfect settings for schools. Contrast a chateau against a functional-built modern school (so

often over-crowded) and we wonder why much of our education in America is in such a sad state! The Chateau de la Boissiere, my fìrst chateau, looked like this when I acquired it, and like

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S I X T I E S

Chateau de la Boissiere before...

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this when I finished. It was built in 1200 by a knight who left from there to go to thè Crusades. He built it near thè port of Grau du Roi, for that was thè port from which so many crusaders sailed. We did, of course, add plumbing and a swimming pool, but they in no way detracted from its beauty and romance. For fìve years it housed fifty young Americans every summer who fanned out from there, absorbing thè language, thè history, and thè beauty of France. Then it became thè “Chateau des Enfants”—a child’s fairy tale world for six to twelve-year old children. So many carne each summer that it overflowed and had to be moved, and thè chateau was sold to acquire a much larger base in Switzerland, where it stili carries thè name of a chateau created for children and thè program is stili overflowing.

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Chateau de la Boissiere after MCF's magic touch

The BEST SERVITORS OF THE NEW MAY BE THOSE WHO KNOW AND LOVE THE OLD AND CARRY IT OVER INTO THE NEW. Thomas Mann

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S I X T I E S

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__ The second chateau was thè Chateau de Beauchamp, a recently-built copy of a chateau since thè originai burned down, but it had all thè turrets, sweeping views, acres of woodland, that gave it thè enchantment of a castle. Unfortunately, after five years I had to part with that chateau, as most present-day young people cannot handle such isolation and solitude. They are so used to noise and chaos, they are frightened by silence, and certainly never heard thè “music of thè stars”. They have been so long receptacles of entertainment through television and cassettes they do not know what to do with their time—or with space. So many live crowded on top of each other in cities, in tali buildings, even in supposedly beautiful suburbs, that they seek action and crowds and are afraid to be alone. Wouldn’t it be exciting and wonderful if one could take those seven hundred chàteaux in Burgundy, restore them to their originai beauty, adding plumbing, of course, and turn them all into schools for young people from all over thè world! Divide some according to language, culture, age, special interests, but also be able to mix them so they grow up together. Different governments could contribute funds, supply their best teachers on a rotating basis and create

Chateau de Beauchamp

a curriculum designed for thè twenty-first century. Taking some children from thè refugee camps would change their lives and turn them into worthwhile citizens and thè French Government, as their contribution, could waive its hopeless tax System! [Ed. Note: Beware of The Dreamer!] Mrs. Fleming is sizing up one of thè 700 chateaux in Burgundy —Chateauneuf-enAuxois, scene of her 80th birthday party

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S I X T I E S

But, Gentlemen, I Don’t Know Much About Business We’ve known Mary Crist Fleming for many years. Our fìrst encounter with this impressive lady was in 1967 at an ECIS conference in Lugano. At that time I was Headmaster at thè Overseas School of Rome. Besides Mary Anne, who had accompanied me to thè conference’s opening meeting, there weren’t many women present. Suddenly a dynamic, attractive woman stood up at thè head table. The crowd hushed. Stretching out her arms in welcome, in thè best grande-dame fashion, Mrs. Fleming drawled just two words in her husky, warm voice: ”Good morning.” Before she could continue, thè audience stood up and gave her a standing ovation. Over thè years, as we’ve come to know her better, we’ve realized just why all those attending thè con­ ference that day were so enthusiastic. Despite

her usuai protests to thè ECIS board—“But, gentlemen, I don’t know much about business”— Mrs. Fleming is an astute entrepreneur. She’s a serious educator, thè head of three prestigious international schools. And she’s one of thè most vibrant, charming, sexy women we know. On thè occasion of her eightieth birthday, we applaud Mary Crist Fleming. We too would like to give her a standing ovation for her commitment and her contribution to interna­ tional education. Happy Birthday, Mary Crist Fleming! With love and admiration, Stanley and Mary Anne Haas Athens, Greece NESA Director

If and When I Die

John Amis on a stroll at Capitignano with Cris Fleming, Lynn, Anna, Adrien Aeschliman and last, but certainly not least, Saxon

'V». . ’

110

I fìrst met Cris in thè late Sixties. I was studying singing in my late thirties and to that end was living in a village near Lugano not far from Loreto where thè Post Graduate Program was housed. This Was thè year that English teacher Bob Holland carne back from thè cinema one evening to find that his new red MG sports car had been taken apart and reassembled in his none too spacious bedroom. I had met a TASIS architect called Sam and his colleague Jerry Wells and soon I had been hired by thè PG headmaster to give (serious) music

talks—what Virgil Thomson used to cali thè ‘music-appreciation’ racket! I met many of thè staff but somehow I missed meeting MCF. That carne in Andermatt where thè PGs went for thè fìrst semester in thè year: skiing and schooling combined. I went up for week-ends and gave one or two lectures. One evening I noticed some rather good legs and enquired whose they were. The delightful English housekeeper (she always called thè forerunner of thè piano thè ‘harpisschord’) said “oh, that’s Mrs. Fleming”. Most of thè female members of thè staff were somewhat in awe of MCF, I remember, thè men less so. It was different for me, possibly because she wasn’t my boss. In fact, it was very different, for I liked her straightaway, seemed to hit her wavelength, in short we clicked. I quickly had a great admira­ tion for this tycooness and soon we were on fìrst name terms, I was invited to dinner and soon got to know Tom, Lynn, and Gai. And so it has continued. I have been made most welcome at her various houses in Italy, in France, and in Switzerland. She is a wonderful hostess and I go for thè way she handles her life and her problems. Cris takes in everything that is going on around her but focuses on one task at a time. She is brilliant at thinking on her feet and that includes speech-making. I do a bit of thè latter and so I not only admire what she says,


S I X T I E S

but how she says it—she has a naturai technique, knows all about pacing and using thè various parts of her voice, when to go for it, when to lower thè voice so as to grab thè audience’s emotions. One of her strong points is that she can switch off so that she is able to refresh herself with her social life and with sleep, not be a worrier. That, I am sure, is why she is so healthy and able. Cris has had plenty of problems, often because she trusts people. Now it is easy to remember some of thè ones who have let her down; but what is great about her, is that she stili goes on trusting people and there are many more of them who have not let her down but justifìed her confìdence and trust. I bet most people writing about Cris will mention her generosity; and they will be right and I’d like to join them in that. I love being with her (even if she occasionally tires me out) and enjoy her company. My telephone will ring: she is here in London for two or three days, can we meet? Yes, we usually do; and just carry on where we left off last time. The one time we did business together we didn’t do much business! That was when we had a small house party combined with a mini­

festival of French music at Chateau Beauchamps. A good time was had by thè small gathering, but I won’t say more about that because I know Felix Aprahamian has written about that. More recently when we met, Cris let fall into thè conversation that she had found herself, when discussing future policy with Lynn, using thè following words: “If and when I die__” And that triggered off in my mind a vision, far off in thè future, of thè arrivai of MCF at thè gates of heaven... in a VW mini-bus, of course. While thè gilt chairs are being unloaded, Cris will advance towards St. Peter, bracelets jangling, will seize his face with both hands, plant a wet kiss on both his cheeks, leaving fresh lipstick marks and saying, “Well, aren’t you a sweetie to welcome me like this” and will then turn towards thè green plastic ice-bucket that she has also brought with her and start to mix him an Old-Fashioned... Cris is a great gal and a great pai. She sure deserves to get to heaven because of all thè good she has done and will continue to do__ John Amis Music critic, London Former music lecturer, TASIS Post Graduate Program

You Told Me You Were a Survivor A stunning revelation! Convinced that you are utterly ageless, we now pause in thè middle of your career to shout a resounding “HAPPY BIRTHDAY”. Even those who have known you longer could not hold you in higher esteem, nor more affectionately, nor with greater respect than this family. Your standards of integrity; your great courage and spirit; your entrepreneurial accomplishments are exemplary to say thè least—inspirations to all. This was revealed again in those dark days of [Fleming College] Board meetings some years ago when your fortitude and courage carried me through that agonizing experience even though we didn’t prevail. But you told me you were a (( ---------------------- y ---------------------- y-----------------------------------------------------------___________ and a survivor” and you were

right—and an inspiration. TASIS is never far away—in memory and spirit. Maude spotted a TASIS book-bag at Orchard School recently and found a youngster who had been in a younger grade in your school in England...... The Glores send our affectionate and sincere best wishes and friendship for a very happy 1990 birthday. Where will thè party be in 2000?—we’re available. Robert Hixon Glore Lake Forest, Illinois Alumni parent, Post Graduate Program, Swiss Holiday, Fleming College Board member, Fleming College

All Round Wonderful Gal! Cris Fleming was, and I assume, stili is, a reai “pistol”! There will never be another one from thè mold. She is smart, tough, gently conniv-

ing, intuitive, a big “flirt,” disciplinarian and all round WONDERFUL GAL!. So she’s going to be 80 years young this

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Of COURTESY, IT IS MUCH

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THAN COURAGE OF HEART OR HOLINESS,/ BUT IN ALL MY WALKS I SEEM

year. That is wonderful and I only hope thè past few years have been kind to her. Our relationship started when I was Ambassador and took my eldest son to TASIS and she invited us, including my late wife, to luncheon. It was thè beginning of a most wonderful rela­ tionship. As I served on thè Board of Fleming College, watching thè “revolt” and attempted take-over of thè College, her calmness and determination under fire (like white-hot Steel) made me realize that here is no ordinary woman. I have not had thè pleasure of seeing her

since she was honored by thè Award from thè Secretary of Education here and have missed our visits as she used to come to Washington every year or so “drumming” up new and prospective students. I’m sorry I have no photos I could send you, yet my mind brings out thè most vivid pictures of a thoroughly striking, delightful friend. True Davis Washington, D.C. Alumni parent, TASIS

TO SEE / THE GRACE OF GOD IN

Classy Place—Classy Lady

COURTESY Belloc

112

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The Summerskills lived in Ethiopia in thè late ’60s where daughter Wendy and son Robert attended thè British School. How would they get to an American university? That’s how we got to Lugano and TASIS and Mary Crist Fleming. First impressions: a classy place—traditional buildings beautifully furnished, a wonderful location with marvelous views and grounds, all run by a CLASSY LADY. Look at thè way she dresses! Listen to her talk! Watch thè raw intelligence flash in those brown eyes! Someone SPECIAL! Karachi, Pakistan. Mimi and I arrived early, like 5 a.m., and our hotel room would not be ready for hours. There was a message to cali St. Moritz immediately. Much worried, we did and found Peter Smith, head of thè senior school: “Robert broke his leg skiing but he is doing fine. I called because one of our girls also broke a leg and I wanted your permission to put them in thè same hospital room for company. It’s OK, I think, they’re both in traction.” Athens, Greece. We saw Cris quite often in Athens when we headed Athens College and she had TASIS in Kifissia. It was difficult for all of us under thè Socialist government of thè Athens College alumnus Andreas Papandreou. Before he became prime minister he said loud and clear: “If I am elected I will abolish those schools which are private and elite and foreign!” TASIS and Cris got thè worst rap. Some GreekAmerican parents complained to thè Ministry of Education and Religion that a TASIS teacher asked for essays on both sides of thè TurkishGreek controversy. Without warning thè Ministry fired thè teacher and thè TASIS librarian who supplied research materials for thè students. When Cris got to town all thè heads of Ameri­ can schools in Athens went to TASIS to show

her their personal support and sympathy. Sometimes Cris stopped by Athens College to see us quietly. Delicious interludes of gin, head-master griping, speculation about thè future of our respective institutions. “What do you think I should do,” she mused, “about a director who is sleeping with a teacher? It’s becoming a public affair?” John Summerskill showed immediate interest: “Is she attractive?” Washington, D.C. We were in Washington looking for money for Athens College and made a cali to an old friend, Steve Muller, president of Johns Hopkins University. Muller said he would be in Washington next day because Secretary of Education Bell was making an award to Mary Crist Fleming for her outstanding contribution to international education. We put on our best, sincere suits and hiked ourselves to thè top floor of HEW and a fancy conference room where thè Secretary said terribly impressive things about Cris and awarded her. It was no surprise really. Muller and thè Summerskills and everyone else present knew Cris is a believer and a doer and she has stood for thè best in American education abroad. She has made a really important contribution to thè education of thousands of boys and girls—our two included. London, England. On Phene Street in London Towne stands a home four stories tali with exquisite furnishings and wee garden and a feel about it that says CLASSY LADY. We are among thè few privileged to stay on Phene Street and we are among thè few that have inadvertently set off its burglar alarm and we are definitely among thè few that have restored thè hall paint with a very careful brush to its originai Victorian splendor. Best, though, were thè times when Cris


S I X T I E S rushed in from America or Italy or Switzerland or Greece and we had a drop or two, possibly three, and talked about everything important like ourselves and our families and our schools. Then off she rushed to America or Italy or Switzerland or Greece leaving with us a lifelong supply of vitality and charm and fun

and wisdom. Last impressions from Phene Street: that raw intelligence flashing from those brown eyes. John f and Mimi Summerskill Belle Mead, New Jersey Alumni parents, TASIS

The Craziest Task I Ever Did ....lor Mrs. Fleming was thè Spaghetti— Alumni—Tour with Brian Kusel and a Maltese chef in a caravan decorated by Betsy into a Ticinese grotto restaurant, pulled or rather dragged by an underpowered VW bus. We were barely able to shift into fourth gear, with head wind into second. I found a napkin with thè geographic schedule. I chickened out in New Orleans to stay sane. Maybe you remember? I certainly do, every detail of it__ Gerhard Schwarzacher St. Anton, Austria Former counselor, Swiss Holiday, and TASIS Representative

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Dictated from Planes, Taxis, Cars and from under thè Hairdryer Twenty-two years ago I left England to become Secretary to thè Founder and Director of The American School in Switzerland. My first job was to type hundreds and hundreds of addresses on to flyers shaped like little blue Volkswagen buses—thè follow-up to a journey that Mrs. Fleming had organized, where TASIS buses travelled across thè States serving up spaghetti to alumni. I hardly ever saw Mrs. Fleming in my early years at TASIS. Huge tape-bands, (no cassettes in those days), arrived by express airmail post from all over thè world, dictated from planes, taxis, private cars, or from under thè hairdryer! (Sometimes they were very difficult to transcribe, especially when she dictated in French!) During one of her brief visits to Lugano, Mrs. Fleming told me that once while driving along thè autostrada from Rome Airport, dur­ ing thè rime of thè Aldo Moro kidnapping, she was catching up with her correspondence using her hand-held dictaphone machine. Shortly after her arrivai at Capitignano, there was a terrible commotion outside thè door and thè Carabinieri rushed in, brandishing machine

guns, insisting on examining thè walkie-talkie and demanding to know Moro’s whereabouts. Mrs. Fleming, unable to produce thè great statesman, offered them instead a couple of her famous bourbon old fashioneds, after which

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V

they left happily, apologizing for their mistake. I stili enjoy working for Mrs. Fleming, but now that I’ve finished thè typing of thè text for this book, I hope to have a moment to catch my breath before starting on Volumes II and III, to commemorate her 90th and lOOth birthdays!

Thank you, Mrs. Fleming, for all these years. Let’s have lots more together! Sarah di Lenardo Montagnola, Switzerland Secretary to Mrs. Fleming

Birthday Greetings to a Great Originai ri

ighest and most affectionate salutations to you, Dearest Cris, on your eightieth birthday. It is a wonderful milestone but only, we know, an elegant staging point to your ninetieth in thè new millennium and 100—Not Out—a decade later. It is twenty-one years almost to thè day since we fìrst met and in that time it is you who have got younger and I, immeasurably older. Your energy, your commitment to excellence in education, and just as important your ability to mesmerize and delight your many friends, is undimmed and never to be diminished. Nor, happily, is thè wonderful Fleming style of happenings and performances, commencements, outstanding picnics in romantic places, or adventures in reai estate in any way reduced. Mirabile Dictu! You have taken on thè mantle of friend and genius hostess emeritus to three generations of my family, be it on thè fields of TASIS, or your

Tuscan mountain top. How lucky we are. Long, long may you flourish. Nigel Blackwell Oxford, England

“Project Europe and you—thè force behind it all.... Not a day goes by that I am not increasingly aware of thè advantages to Joan her fabulous summer has brought her.... She has gained a new maturity and confidence.... I am sensitive to her new awareness of world news and art, discrimination in friends and activities, and thè happiness in receiving thè letters that teli me of thè warmth of relationships made.... “Thank you for thè expert leadership, guidance and supervision of your wonderfully organized Project Europe.” Cornelia Field Alumna parent, Project Europe (written in 1967) “Mr. Hutchinson and I would like to take this opportunity to say how very much we appreciate thè many things that your school has done for our daughter, Dana Lee. It is difficult to put one’s finger on this sort of thing, but we found that she was intellectually stimulated, given a chance to mature emotionally, guided in appreciation of her European surroundings, and afforded good physical care. We could see an appreciable progress in her personality and studies in thè two years she was with you and your staff at The American School.” Virginia Hutchison Alumna parent, TASIS (written in 1968)

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"As you and TASIS have determined this selection [of colleges], I thought you might be interested in thè power of your influence! “... As a result of those short two months in Lugano, my major has changed to International Affairs, with a tentative vocation of International Business or Law! .... I am changing my language to Italiani!! You spoke at thè banquet of your hope of influencing at least one person this summer—well Mrs. Fleming, you certainly sold me! “.... you can realize to what degree you have awakened me and made me aware of thè world around me, and sparked me with thè desire to explore and broaden my horizons.” Ann Dodge Former student, Project Europe (written in 1968) “... I do want to teli you how very much I appreciate your work and effort that went into making this such a fantastic and meaningful summer for me. Never in my life have I lived a more active or more fascinating two months. I think thè program that you [and your staff] put together is absolutely superb. ... I believe there is no way in which a young American can see Europe that would be more meaningful than through Project Europe. For me it was truly an experience that I will carry with me for thè rest of my life.... "I know thè [others] will find in ‘your Europe’ an experience which will be with them for many years to come. ” Tom Powell Former student, Project Europe (written in 1968) "Of anyone, it is you who should be called thè Bionic Woman! l’m sure you have one leg in Italy, your torso in Switzerland, a large hand in England, toes in France, Russia, Greece, and Germany, and your heart in thè right place!.... "I thank you for giving me thè opportunity and thè guidelines to learn and grow as a good and intelligent human being.... "You are my Bionic Lady doing good in all areas of education all over thè world, and you’re not even interrupted by commercials! Congratulations, and love to you." Peter Graham Belin TASIS student, 1969 ARTE '69-73 (written in 1976)

I X T I E S

Men

are

QUALIFIED FOR CIVIL LIBERTY IN EXACT PROPORTION TO THEIR DISPOSITION TO PUT MORAL CHAINS UPON THEIR OWN APPETITES. SOCIETY CANNOT EXIST UNLESS A CON­ TROLLINO POWER UPON WILL AND APPETITE BE PLACED SOMEWHERE, AND THE LESS OF IT THERE IS FROM WITHIN THE MORE THERE MUST BE FROM WITHOUT. IT IS ORDAINED IN THE ETERNAL CONSTITUTION OF THINGS THAT MEN OF INTEMPERATE MINDS CANNOT BE FREE. TPIEIR PASSIONS FORGE THEIR FETTERS. Edmund Burke

Peter Belin celebrates his 21st birthday with Mrs. Fleming

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SEVENTIES

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She’s a Magician I remember my first meeting with Mary Crist Fleming more clearly than I remember what I did yesterday. It was in thè early summer of 1970. I had been asked by ARTE directors George Marchi and Robert Wilson, both friends from thè Drama Department at thè University of California at Berkeley.. .to join TASIS’s second summer theatre season as part actor, part set painter, part whatever. Because of a schedule conflict, I arrived in thè Lugano evening a few days late, after everybody had already met everybody else. The next day as we were having lunch in thè elegant but humid courtyard of thè Villa Negroni, I looked up from my piate and there across thè way, standing under thè arch, was a woman of such commanding presence that she took my breath away. Without being told, I knew immediately that she was Mrs. Fleming... serene and animated at thè same time, cool in a dark blue dress with a wide white collar, smiling, making her way through thè crowded tables, talking to students and staff, instantly changing and charging thè atmosphere. Incredible. She carne to our table, we stood, I was introduced and promptly fell in love.

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I ve thought many times over thè last two decades how fortunate I am to have known Mrs. Fleming, and how sorry I feel for those unfortunates who haven’t. Eversone deserves a Mary Crist Fleming in their life. And I’ve come to thè conclusion that Mrs. Fleming is a magician. A sorceress. Yes, and an alchemist. It’s a known fact that she can turn base metal into pure gold. It’s a known fact that she has discovered thè elixir of perpetuai youth. And she changes things. She enters a room and all conversation stops; heads turn as one in her direction. The room is suddenly brighter, more vibrant; thè very air is energized. She shakes your hand or gives you a hug and you’re instantly a better person. You stand straighter, you suck in your stomach, you wish you’d polished your shoes. You get goosebumps. You pray you won’t say something stupid. Time flies. You note thè impeccably tailored dress and wonder in amazement how any wrist can support so many gold bracelets. You marvel at this force of nature and your recollections days later are a blur. She speaks to you and you know you’re thè only person in thè world who matters to her at that moment. You’re transfixed, she has transformed you. She’s a magician.

I suspect it isn’t often that one gets much time alone with Mrs. Fleming. There are always so many friends and family about, students, faculty, staff... so many demands on her time and attention. But in December of 1971, while on a brief visit to Montagnola, one evening, quite by chance, I had Mrs. Fleming all to myself. That morning she had acquired, or been given two tickets for thè performance of “Madama Butterfly” at La Scala that evening. Would I like to go? Would I... ? Oh, God! My favorite opera in thè world’s most famous opera house! YES! We leave Montagnola not a moment too soon. She is driving. Black dress, of course, for La Scala. Gold bracelets. Mink. We no sooner cross thè border at Chiasso than it’s decided we need a drink. An old fashioned. In thè glove compartment where ordinary people keep road maps, Kleenex and dead ballpoint pens, MCF


S E V E N T I E S

has an entire bar in miniature: bourbon, ice, sweet vermouth, bitters, sugar cubes, even orange slices. I begin to mix drinks as we’re roaring south on thè autostrada at sixtysomething mph. I’m also thinking: I don’t believe this__ I do not believe this is happen­ ing. We’re going to be arrested and spend thè rest of our time in an Italian jail. But I’m wrong. The gods look down differently on Mrs. Fleming. We arrive safely in Milan and have dinner in one of thè charming restaurants in thè Galleria. Then thè opera. Heaven. Perfect seats, naturally. The red and gold auditorium is smaller but more beautiful than I’d imagined. Tucci and Aragall are magnificent. At thè intermission I realize I’m thè only camel-hair sportscoat in a sea of black Italian suits. (But then, I

hadn’t packed for La Scala.) I ask Mrs. Fleming if she understands thè singers, knowing that she speaks Italian. “I don’t know, Tom,” she replies, “ITI have to pay more attention.” There’s no big ending to this adventure. We aren’t arrested; we do return to Montagnola late but in one piece. Twenty years later I don’t recali if I mixed more drinks on thè drive back. Probably not. Common sense may have finally prevailed. Nonetheless, it was a rare and perfect evening alone with an equally rare and perfect person. I will never, never forget it. Tom Roberts San Francisco, California Former Designer, ARTE

Margaret Kate Natsui (center) enjoying a “Mrs. Fleming picnic"

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“.. .Thank you for thè marvelous ‘house-party’/reunion! Other than my two years at TASIS, I have never had such a good time. "•. .Thank you for thè most gracious and generous hospitality which you extended to us. Your enthusiasm and warmth are two of thè reasons we all love TASIS so muchi” Margaret Kate Natsui TASIS student, 1962 (written in 1971)

MINDS, WITHOUT AT THE SA ME TIME ADDING TO OUR RESOURCES OF SELF-MASTERY, IS EVIL. Goethe

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Una Persona Come Lei ... non la si può sicuramente dimenticare__ MAI! Felice di aver avuto la Sua fiducia collaborando con la scuola per parecchi anni e se non vado errato fin dalla nascita di TASIS in quel di Montagnola. Le sono molto grato di avermi dato possibilità di incontri con persone simpaticissime, sia in Ticino che all’estero e aver tentato di migliorarmi.

Nella speranza di rivederla presto, a Lei, cara Signora Fleming, i miei piu affettuosi AUGURI. Giorgio Guglielmetti Artist Lugano, Switzerland

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Aio )?7' Thank God You Were Not Born a Man Two vignettes come to mind from my “Life with MCF”: The first took place in Los Angeles at thè Bel Air Hotel in 1971. We were on one of our USA cross-country jaunts hosting alumni reunions, and had quite a late evening as I recali. At around 6:30 AM, thè ground started shaking as a very sizable earthquake struck thè area. (We subsequently learned that it had collapsed several freeway overpasses and had done considerable damage.) I jumped out of bed, stood

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in thè doorway, and watched half thè water in one of thè pools get sloshed out over thè grounds. Having been raised in California, and being young, stupid and tired, I went back to sleep as we were not to meet for breakfast until around 8:30 or 9:00. When I saw you at breakfast you were stili somewhat shaken and when asked what you had done during thè ‘quake, you replied quite forcefully “I grabbed my jewels and my fur coat, and got thè hell out of thè room—as fast


S E V E N T I E S

as I could!” E ver a woman of action with her priorities right! The other occurrence took place in 1978 in Annie’s and my fìrst, tiny house in Chicago. Once again, you were “on tour” and were spending a night or two with us during your stay in Chicago. One evening as you were about to retire in your bedroom, we heard a yelp, and we both carne running. At that time, we had a tiny black kitten, whose favorite toy was a white fox stole complete with head, that had belonged to Annie’s Grandmother. Apparently, thè cat with stole had decided that you and your bed looked inviting, and without invitation had jumped up and given you quite a start. You will be pleased to know that both thè cat and thè stole are long since out of our lives. Whether barreling down thè Autostrada sip— ping Gin and Tonics from thè infamous green plastic ice buckets, or dealing with Dr. Barr, George Lawson, or others in thè “cast of thousands” who have worked for you over thè years, you have always given 110 percent to everything you do. I remember Dutch Gage saying to me once before I had met you (and before male chauvinism was known as such) that “if she were a man, she’d be president of General Motors.” Well thank God you were not born a man, for without a female MCF, there would be no TASIS, and there would be thousands of young people who would not have had thè benefit of knowing you and being enriched by thè organization you built. I for

Topper Lynn (center) brings actors, ARTE Director George Marchi, and sets into Venice

one, would not have had fìve of thè best years of my life, found friendships which remain important today, and most importantly would not have met my wife had it not been for you and TASIS! As you forge ahead into your next decade, you can know with certainty that you leave in your wake (jetstream is perhaps more appropriate) a world better for your presence. Much, much love, best wishes, and congratulations on thè occasion of your eightieth. Christopher (Topper) Lynn Aptos, California Former Director of Admissions, TASIS

High Priestess Th e sun was setting deep in thè Mediterranean, its last rays outlining thè steep sides of smoking Mount Etna. In thè city of Taormina, high above thè sea, thè lamps of evening were being lit. The night was warm, only thè gentlest breeze moved thè flags and banners. The city was crowded and bubbling with thè excitement of a festival. In thè distance was heard a drum and thè music of a parade. The crowds opened a path and down thè winding Corso Umberto a procession advanced, and wound its way toward one of thè most beautiful theatres in thè world. The procession was led by a high priestess in handsome robes. She rode in a charming painted wagon which was pulled by a flower-bedecked donkey. The priestess was followed by thè actors, dancers and musicians of thè evening’s play, all in splendid costume.

Taormina—“one of thè most beautiful theatres in thè world"

___

f*

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“Tom Roberts knows his Italians, too”

Familiarity WITH BEAUTY CAN ONLY BREED MORE BEAUTY. Rorimer, Metropolitan Museum (doubled attendarne)

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Ancient times or now? The answer is yes, end of thè play. It has a happy ending of both. The spirit, color, joy and even thè play course, thè leading characters being united in a was of ancient Greece and Rome but, of course glorious wedding ceremony. As thè story takes thè company was TASIS’s American Repertory place in thè clouds (Cloud Coo-coo Land), Theatre in Europe and thè High Priestess leading Tom covered thè stage with huge white, thè company to thè theatre was Mrs. Fleming. helium-filled balloons. He placed a charming This ambitious company toured Europe for latticed bird house in thè center. At thè finale, many years and I was invited to join them for with thè music at full volume, banners flying their 1972 season. It was a summer company and my near-naked chorus down front, we made up of advanced students and young proreleased thè balloons. They floated triumphantly fessionals. The year I was with them we presented up into thè black night. Then, as thè balloons two plays, Euripides’ Medea and Aristophanes’ cleared thè heads of thè actors, I set off a The Birds. We played thè major open air Greco- glorious display of fireworks! It was a director’s Roman theatres found on thè long peninsula of dream come true; I felt like Rheinhart, deMille Italy. We opened in Taormina, Sicily, with thè and Barnum and Bailey combined. Touring is always a rich experience but this final performance being given in thè beautiful theatre in Fiesole, just north of Florence. particular one had an extra dimension. We I directed The Birds and since we would be would arrive in town, hot and tired from playing to a predominantly Italian audience, travel, fìnd thè theatre, lay out thè props and costumes and rehearse, just as you might on many of whom would not understand English, any tour and then, sometime during thè perform­ I knew I must use every possible trick to make thè play coherent and/or interesting. I was lucky ance, sitting backstage awaidng your cue, it would occur to you: thè realization of where to have two brilliant comedians for my male leads: Rodger Henderson and Dirk Torsek. Both you really were. We were playing in thè very theatre for which these two-thousand-year-old are very physical actors and were able to conplays had been written. vey much with gesture and mime. The chorus This was an experience of a life-time and one (thè Birds themselves) was comprised of young, for which a great many people—both on thè handsome American females. Tom Roberts, our stage and in thè audience—will be deeply distinguished designer, gave them magnifìcence grateful to that high-priestess, Mrs. Fleming. with large bird-mask headdresses. He gave them very little else; he knows his Italians, too. The comedy is bright and silly and great fun Jack Cook San Francisco, California to play and direct as well as to watch. The best opportunity for me as director carne at thè very Fortner Visiting Director, ARTE


SEVENTIES

Hired by Mail My first, and most vivid memory of TASIS, and of Mrs. Fleming, is thè fact that I was hired by mail, without benefit of interview, examination, or investigation. Perhaps not an odd turn of events: but it was to me. At a certain stage of my life I had itchy feet, wanderlust, and a developing disgust for thè traditional and sedentary lifestyle I had been leading. I was reading an article and pictorial layout in some flossy glossy magazine [perhaps Town & Coun­ try, Harpers, or Vogue\ about a gorgeous looking educational facility in some place called Lugano, owned and operated by a mysterious yet fascinating lady named Fleming: who had emerged from a spot hearing thè unlikely name of Frog Hollow. At about that rime I met a fellow here in Toronto, a long-time resident of Lugano, who was here on a tour of duty with The Fidinam Group. He of course extolled thè virtues of living in Lugano: but when I asked him if he was familiar with TASIS he merely raised his eyebrows and made no comment. Not to be deterred, and as I was looking for an adventure and some European teaching experience, I fìred off an impassioned plea to Mrs. Fleming, wondering if she might have a place on her staff for a middle-aged, yet stili mentally active teacher of History, albeit a Canadian. My letter, perhaps only for its presumptuous nature, seemed to intrigue her, and I soon received a letter from thè then Headmaster George Lawson, that he had been instructed by The Director to hire me. I certainly felt wanted. I was tremendously flattered by all of this: although I later carne to realize that almost anyone without two heads and a criminal record, and who was bold enough to take thè plunge, was welcomed at TASIS with open arms. Nevertheless, in retrospect, my rime at TASIS was thè greatest adventure of my life, and my years there were my happiest.

As time went by, and Mrs. Fleming seemed to fìnd me a tolerable fellow, she would, when introducing me to her friends and business associates, and after extolling my modest virtues, would loudly proclaim: “and he’s a Canadian too.” That would always provoke strange looks: and some were impolite enough to ask what was a Canadian doing teaching American History? I always responded [and deeply felt]

that this almost heretical situation was bound to produce an impartial, dispassionate, and fresh approach to thè subject.

I also vividly remember one of thè annual traditional Thanksgiving Dinners at TASIS. Mrs. Fleming seemed to think that my wife and I (particularly my wife) had a touch of class and a few social graces, and therefore asked that we sit with and entertain a certain Mrs. Getty, who happened to be visiting thè school at that time. Unfortunately Mrs. Fleming in her speech to thè school, chose thè occasion to berate Richard Nixon, thè American involvement in Vietnam, and thè sorry state of thè American Republic in generai. Mrs. Getty seemed to be outraged by all of this, no doubt being a right-wing reactionary and solid Republican. Whatever thè reason, she leaned over to me, said she had listened to enough of this, was going to walk out, and would I be good enough to escort her to thè door. Covered with confusion I felt I had to do so: but thè look I received from thè speaker as we crossed thè room would have reduced Hercules to a shuddering hulk. Her daughter, Lynn Aeschliman, who was standing in thè doorway, and whom we had to pass, did not look too pleased either. I thought I was finished at TASIS, but mercifully neither of these ladies, as indeed was their style, ever made reference to this alarming display of disloyalty on my part.

Another incident often springs to mind, especially during periods of International currency fluctuations. I just forget thè point in time and thè exact year, but thè U.S. Doliar had been almost fatally devalued. Naturally, as thè school fees were payable in Swiss Francs, a lot of American parents were hurting: and if they were hurting, so was TASIS. Mrs. Fleming called us all together in The Library, told us of thè situation, explained that it was only a “temporary inconvenience,” but pointed out that we might all have to put our shoulders to thè wheel, and even might have to forego our salaries for a month or two. There were a few mutterings of discontent, so, if only to break thè tension, I pointed out that thè Canadian

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DoUar was very healthy at thè time, even fetching a premium, so why did TASIS not conduct its future affairs in that currency. I was rewarded with a rather wan smile by Mrs. Fleming.

lhe lady was, and remains, one of thè most electrifying personalities I have ever known. I absolutely adored her and counted it a peculiar privilege to have worked for her, however briefly. She had more than “a touch of class” and I, being slightly devious myself, greatly admired her methods and her results. Gordon Heyd Toronto, Ontario Former history teacher, TASIS

Entre Nous, Dear The very first time I met Mary Crist Fleming, 18 years ago now, she was talking about retiring. Frankly, from thè outset, it was pretty obvious, she didn’t mean it. “Entre nous, dear,” as she is fond of saying. In fact, it was my guess that this was a little test of hers. If for some reason you agreed that this was a reasonable, prudent and desirable course of action, you were off her “A” list forever. I remember her standing by thè liquor cabinet tucked near thè fìreplace at Casa Fleming in Lugano, with thè emerald green upholstery and Lucia standing guard. She stocked your choice of poison and some pretty exotic alternatives. But she herself preferred her perfect Old Fashioned mixed by a hand other than hers. My friend Michael had this job at thè time. She had just had an extra gas tank welded into her dark green Volvo station wagon. This was to make thè frequent round trip between Montagnola and Florence an on-the-fly no-gas-necessary round-trip. Despite what her daughter Lynn was telling me, this seemed someone unlikely to retire soon. I had a certain amount of practice in these matters with my own mother, a near contemporary of hers. She didn’t mean it either. I’m sure others will remember her best as an educator, but I look back on her most fondly as a woman of business. When I think of MCF, of her charm, and her vision, of her occasionai eccentricities, I remember someone who taught me perhaps better than any other, how to do

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things in thè grande style...and pay tourist prices. I never saw anyone work quite as hard at being naturally gracious. I stili can see her pouring over her books of alumni and student photographs before any gathering. I have to say that I never met a more resourceful, shrewder and irrepressible entrepreneur. She is often a model to me when things aren’t going as they should. Once when I was reviewing thè history of various programs for a new catalog, I commented on how many there had been (22 or so at that point). The only common thread seemed to be Mrs. Fleming’s sense of style. Her response was, “If I had stuck with any of these programs as they were, dear, there’d be no TASIS. The only thing we have in common is thè little blue buses.” I must admit that thè cleverest lesson I ever received on keeping appearances up and fixed costs down, was thè way she used thè rental houses in Montagnola as flexible dormitory space that could go up and down with enrollment. And no-one could teli because it was never clear where thè village stopped and thè campus began in thè first place. I think I once held thè record for having more jobs in a shorter period of time than anyone at TASIS (although I wouldn’t bet 5 francs on it). During one tumultuous transition, I remember cautioning Fernando Gonzalez when he took over thè Director of Development position. I told him that Mrs. Fleming


SEVENTIES

will teli him that she’ll want to cut down thè cost of thè next catalogs. From sore experience, I suggested that he ignore this, and always opt for quality over savings if he wanted to last through thè next project. (It must have been good advice.) Overhearing, MCF said, “That’s right, dear.” My advice to anyone who is listening to her now, as she approaches her eightieth year,

is... not to take seriously any talk of retirement. She doesn’t mean it yet... or ever. Entre nous, you can count on it. MacRae Ross Arlington, Virginia Former history and English teacher, College Counselor, and Special Projects Coordinator, TASIS

MCF: A Few Personal Glimpses over 18 Short Years ^JC^ho stili wears gloves with insouciance, yet can tuck up her floor-length evening skirt to cope with a sudden small flood in her powder room as faculty dinner guests are arriving? Who loves ice cream and opens all gifts with gratifying glee, no matter how trivial they may be, managing to convince thè giver that it is exactly what she has always longed for? Who has made thè European “kiss greeting” such a trademark that a senior would fìnd Commencement incomplete without a small memento on his or her cheek in honor of thè occasion? Who has so thoroughly earned thè soubriquet “Autostrada Rose” that, as she was spreading cheese on crackers and mixing gin and tonics in our back seat, she passed one to thè driver, who was hitting 140 kms. per hour, asking gently, “Don’t you think you could go a bit faster, dear?” Who has been honored in all spheres for her immense achievements in thè fìeld of education, from thè United States Government to that of her peers, and is always so perfectly coiffed and made up, ready for any occasion, that, when embraced by an old friend, she was asked by thè startled gentleman, “Is that a pistol you’re packing, Cris?” [referring to thè lipstick she always carries tucked in her brassiere]. Who has such poise that she can keep smiling, undisconcerted, when a senior, tentatively holding his fìrst legai aperitif at thè cocktail party preceding thè Senior Banquet, tips it right down her decolletage when she gathers him in for thè traditional warm welcome? Who has such interest in all she meets, regardless of their worldly importance, that she recognizes and remembers everyone, as epitomized by her greeting of thè delighted black maid of some of her hosts whom she hugged, saying, “We old gals have got to stick together, haven’t we, Lulu-Mae?” Yes, you’ve got it!

"who stili wears gloves with insouciance”

"opens all gifts with gratifying glee”

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"wearing thè unheard

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Kate and Fernando Gonzalez stand behind Mrs. Fleming with Hillary Hylan, Elizabeth Acer, Anne van Brussel, and Bob Bruno enjoying thè party, too

Merry, Caring, Fantastic, our MCF.

What a daunting task. Oddly enough, to write something was easier ten years ago when we knew Mrs. Fleming less well. There have been so many events in these action-packed 18 years since we joined TASIS—from her arrivai with Lynn and Michael at Les Tapies in thè middle of thè night, accompanied by thunder and lightning, to her picnicking in Iran—wearing thè unheard of—tennis shoes (yes, we’ve seen a picture—actual proofì). What a complex and fascinating character she is, driven by her intense interest in people, her desire to improve thè world’s prospects by educating young people to live together in harmony and cooperation, and her will to achieve thè impossible. We have all had moments of wondering whether thè world was topsy-turvy or thè right way up, but it has always been interesting, challenging, and ultimately extremely satisfying. We look forward to thè wonderful festivities, and will feel privileged to help Mrs. Fleming mark her entry into her ninth decade— indomitable as ever, with thè unquenchable thirst for life and enjoyment of it which have made her such fun to work with and to know. Kate and Fernando Gonzalez TASIS England, Thorpe Director of Alumni Affairs and Director of Development

... and Puppy Dogs’ Tails! /\n intense supporter of thè concept of independent educatimi, I am having a new experience as to how it actually works. The same weekend that I retreated to thè country for a quiet period to package my educational philosophy for this article, I undertook, in all innocence, to wean four basset puppies, aged three weeks. You will, therefore, understand if my approach to thè young seems both biased and over-simplified. As I dip thè small creatures’ noses into thè warm milk, watch them wade deep into thè pan instead of drinking, then drag their dripping ears over thè sheepskin rug, I realize how very comparable bringing up puppies is to running a school.

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You just aim for total immersion! So, in a school, you aim for immersion in thè subjectmatter of thè classroom, in thè chemistry laboratory, on thè sports field, in thè theatre and at thè student council meeting; you aim for as much exposure as possible in thè fervent hope that something will be absorbed. No matter what our individuai theory of how it is done, or our different approach as to thè business of education, we all know that we have one goal in common. That is, to give to each of our students as broad an introduction as is possible to thè world, representing as it does man’s cumulative knowledge, his vision and even his “impossible dreams.” We do this in thè hope that large quantities of man’s wisdom


SEVENTIES

and experience will be in some measure transferred to these new manifestations of human endeavor that we are trying to educate. With pups it is easy—just get a larger trough and they’ll wallow blissfully. But how about thè walls of thè “milk pan” when you mean a school? At a time in American education when magnifìcent gymnasiums were being built, when any good school boasted fìve or ten sports fields, when endowments rose along with thè walls of auditoriums and chapels, when campuses were intentionally set so far apart that you had to belong to thè varsity track team before you could visit a member of thè opposite sex, I had a different idea. I believed walls to thè world should be flattened. I believed in having no specific campus, but instead, choosing any large area and using it as a campus. I took my cue from thè needs of thè young so well expressed by Wallace Stegner: “We simply need that wild country available to us even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in it. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of thè geography of hope.” I could have chosen Alaska, Tibet, or Timbuctoo, but I chose Europe, all eleven countries, and tossed in North Africa, Russia, and a couple of Greek islands for good measure. 1 keep adding new “sports fields” each year, thè latest is

£ h*

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Prague, thè next one could be Peking! No campus, hence no need for formalized buildings. Put thè whole thing on wheels, on a boat, in prefab houses, in tents. Wine cellars make great Chemistry labs and thè originai purpose they served is undoubtedly a far greater contribution to humanity than what comes out of many of our white-tiled mausoleums! No buildings, no limiting boundaries. A vigorous international faculty dreams less of thè endowed chair and is instead alive to learning with thè students, eager themselves for exploration, eager to crawl over barriers in other men’s minds and to delve into those limitless regions that evade thè pages of text books. No limit to language. Any true communication between human beings is gratifying and thè exchange of ideas in a foreign language is doubly rewarding to an accomplished linguist. In Europe, with boundaries dose and distances short, there is Constant opportunity for thè disciplines of language and thè sense of exhilaration that goes with achievement. No limits to beauty. The Lord, indeed, made “America, thè beautiful” but over thè centuries thè hand of man has combined with thè finger of God to create timeless works on every hillside and in every hamlet of thè European countryside. Within a few kilometers, frescoes, churches, monasteries, Roman bridges and feudal villages, to say nothing of magnifìcent cathedrals, extravagant palaces and galleries, are there for thè beholding. The Grand Canyon is grand indeed, but it is hundreds of miles from where most of us live, thè Washington Monument is majestic but it is one-of-a-kind; thè Statue of Liberty is a glorious lady but she stands lonely at thè entrance to our country. No limit to History. The piazza of every town, or thè castle crowning every surrounding hill, holds thè history of centuries. Civilizations are there for thè digging. Not many young Americans are enchanted with history, but here again, by dowsing their noses in thè “feeding trough,” some sense of excitement may capture them. This brings me back to my theory of immersion. An indictment against America is thè exact opposite of my intent. My thesis of immersion stems from thè experience of my own children’s education in foreign lands, and from thence a strong conviction that young Americans deserve, and indeed should demand, thè kind of education calculated to train them as citizens of a country whose role is world leadership. There is great concern and much criticism

SomehowI DO NOT BELLE VE THE GREATEST THREAT TO OUR FUTURE IS FROM BOMBS OR GUIDED MISSILES. I DON’T THINK OUR CIVILIZATION WILL DIE THAT WAY. I THINK IT WILL DIE WHEN WE NO LONGER CARE —WHEN THE SPIRITUAL FORCES THAT MAKE US WISH TO BE RIGHT AND NOBLE DIE IN THE HEARTS OF MEN. Lawrence Gould,

Education and Survival

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ILL FARES THE LAND, TO HASTENING ILLS A PREY,/ WHERE WEALTH ACCUMULATES AND MEN DECAY. Goldsmith

128

about thè chaos of our present System of education. The young are disenchanted and thè old dismayed, so certainly a search for a new formula is timely and well worth a trial. Therefore, I do not care where thè “wild country” is. It could be Brazil, Africa or Israel. Certainly Mexico is a likely one. I have chosen Europe for my experiment because to me it signifies thè greatest concentration of thè greatest variety of benefits created by man. I do not believe that an incursion into Europe, or any other foreign land, as an educa­ tional experiment should be limited only to thè formally structured academic year. There are limitless variations on thè same theme that should encompass thè summer months and thè normal vacation periods so as to maximize thè immersion process. The spirit of Huckleberry Finn in almost every American suggests that thè most desirable mode of travel is any kind of outdoor journeying with a knapsack on thè back. The recent wave of “thumbs-up” Americans on every highway in Europe would seem to indicate a return in kind to this “Sawyer and Finn” legend. The renunciation of hotels is often not due to lack of funds but an attempt to recapture thè soul of thè vagabond. Even though they are alarmingly unkept and seemingly unrepresentative of our great country thè search of these young people is often admirable. Certainly traveling thè route of thè grand hotel or thè petit pension is no true way

to sense a country. For what natives of any land are ever found in their own hotels? It is in thè villages, on thè hills and away from hotels that thè traveder comes closest to discovering thè character of thè country and its inhabitants. Consider thè invention of thè wheel as one of thè most important landmarks of history. Consider that today’s students can journey as far in a year of their young life at school as Marco Polo did in a lifetime. How amazing and how wisely we should use thè incredible opportunities this phenomenon offers. So along with my theory of immersion, I believe strongly in thè function of thè wheel. In thè summer, out of thè academic routine, under thè aegis of a European student guide, small buses full of students and camping gear can explore hundreds of kilometers of European terrain. In thè fall and spring, small groups of students can put Geology classes into thè field. Mountain huts shelter climbers as they venture into thè Alps or thè foothills of thè Jura or Appenines. Enthusiastic cyclers place their “wheels” on a train to cover thè first tiresome stretches and get into cycling areas that are particularly rewarding. While less personal as a mode of travel a larger bus for thè winter months is equally effective in hearing groups of twenty-five and thirty-five students across thè borders of neighboring countries or on four-day weekend visits to Munich, Florence, Bern, Basle, into France or even to Ljubljana. Steel wheels on Steel tracks turn through thè night as couchettes carry groups to Paris for a five-day Thanksgiving break. Wheels on runways lift other groups into European skies as they fly to Prague or to Copenhagen. This sounds expensive, but with careful cost control, special group rates, thè use of package and student tours, an amazing amount of Europe can be seen and absorbed. Classes are concentrated, meet on Saturdays, or doublé periods, to make up for time out of thè classroom. In terms of generating greater curiosity, greater fìrst-hand knowledge, and enhancing thè desire to learn in so many subject areas thè benefits of travel are immeasurable. To quote Mark Twain upon Iris return to thè United States after a summer of European travel in 1867. “Travel is fatai to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of thè earth all one’s lifetime.”


SEVENTIES

Now we have thè two chief ingredients of an educational scheme, large-scale immersion and thè concept of mobility. Surely these match thè world of thè twentieth century where one can be on a bus in Madison Avenue at high noon and that evening be in a gondola in thè canals of Venice; where it is commonplace for thè businessman to leave his Stateside office and a few hours later be in thè offices of thè foreign subsidiary; where, in an equally small space of time, Air Force One carries our President from thè Ovai Room to thè Palaces of Peking. There

will be no retrogression from this kind of fife in our century and thè more we can groom our young people to Uve with it and learn from it and not be exhausted by it, thè better thè preparation we have given them for “thè shock of thè future!” Mary Crist Fleming (Artide that appeared in thè 1973 Vincent Curtis Educational Register; to be republished in 1990)

Lightning Struck and I Suddenly Felt Like Tamino Reason and experience persuade me to believe that nobody has ever met Cris Fleming under what might pass as ordinary circumstances. It must always be an epiphany, a sense of becoming a born again “Cris-tian” that accompanies thè beginnings of all Cris’s friendships. We all have our own story and I have waited for years to spili my particular beans. I was forty, considered myself wearily familiar with all worldly surprises and directed a Hellzapoppin Junior-Year-Abroad program in Florence when I was approached by two gentlemen who introduced themselves as emissaries of an institution called Fleming Col­ lege at Vezia in southern Switzerland. They had organized an ambitious arts-festival for their students during thè Thanksgiving break and lavishly invited me to attend together with my family and “as many students as might be interested.” I was blessed by over a hundred undergraduates and about twenty graduates who were all convinced that I had sold my soul to thè devii when they heard that they would be thè guests of Fleming College for three days and as many nights, Thanksgiving dinner included and as for thè arts-festival... well, they would take that into thè bargain, too. Maybe they were right and I had sold my soul to thè devii... or if not my soul at least thè sweat of my brow. The arts-festival consisted of any number of lectures and presentations given in languages unknown to thè two gentlemen who invited me and I was put to work doing simultaneous translation for some twenty hours a day. Not that I could compiami I met some fascinating people, learned a great deal and watched with great satisfaction as my brood of students enjoyed themselves to thè hilt. On balance, thè price paid was almost irrelevant.

Returning to Florence, I thought it correct to send a little letter of thanks to thè mystical Mrs. Mary Crist Fleming who had extended thè invitation via her two ambassadors but who had been prevented from attending thè arts-festival by transatlantic obligations. Within a month I received a rather curt letter from a secretary. Mrs. Fleming had instructed her to let me know that (1) my invitation had been issued without her knowledge (2) she was delighted that my students had enjoyed themselves at Vezia but that, too had not been authorized by her and that (3) Fleming College had been disbanded. I was mortified at first of course but then decided to shrug it all off. Whatever games had been played had been played without my knowledge or connivance. I was as blameless as thè flowers of thè field and if I had encouraged my students to make thè most of their opportunity and they had eaten rather more turkey than was polite, I could hardly be indicted. Stili, it might be prudent to avoid Vezia and Lugano for thè next few years. Vaguely, through thè usuai foreign program grapevine, I heard details of what had happened at and to Fleming College but filed such reports in thè most remote attics of memory. Then, without warning or preamble light­ ning struck and I suddenly felt like Tamino when thè Queen of thè Night appears in thè “Zauberfloete.” I was bidden to lunch at Doney’s in Florence by a series of telephone calls. On Monday at one-thirty. No, Mrs. Fleming had had to leave for thè Middle East and would not be able to meet me until Wednesday at two. Make it Thursday at one. The suspense mounted and suddenly I stood stammering at thè table of a strikingly handsome woman dressed in black (that Queen of

Would

that i

WERE A BEGGAR ON THE STREETS OF FLORENCE BEGGING

TIME

FROM THOSE WHO SQUANDER IT. Berenson

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thè Night, again!) who wore a modish hat even though it was a hundred in thè shade and who welcomed me as if we had been comrades on thè Kon Tiki’s fìrst voyage. Fleming College? It seemed to mean no more than thè nuisance of having a passing pigeon mess up a brand new coiffure. It took me months before I realized how deeply those events had wounded her and stili more months to realize that she nevertheless could not find it in her to bear a grudge against those who had betrayed her trust. She was never too busy to remember but she was far too busy to feel rancor. You had your tonsils out and then there was plenty of ice cream to get you over thè hurt. There was always plenty of ice cream, I learned, in Mrs. Fleming’s life, there was never any reason to look anywhere but ahead. And so we began our friendship on thè spot. Sight unseen she had decided to like me and I... why, suddenly I couldn’t remember that there had been an epoch in my life when I hadn’t known, admired, relied on, delighted in Cris Fleming. We got to work at once. I had been appointed by her to be eminence grise for her latest project. Project? Make that plural because we had discussed at least seven totally diverse ventures and possibilities before dessert was served. I was swept away. I hadn’t thè time to remind myself that I was a blasé man of thè world who was a bit bored with life. I was a yahoo from Eight Ball, Nebraska on a tour of MGM

studios. I was Archimedes watching his bathtub overflow. Anything was possible from now on and that wasn’t even thè half of it. I was a born-again “Cris-tian. This much I am willing to share with all of Cris’s other friends. All that she did for me in our years and decades of friendship, that I want to guard jealously for myself. The generai outline is probably known to all who know Cris: thè good times, thè infusion of zest and courage that she knew how to bestow, thè loyalty in times of need, her way of listening that made you feel far more intelligent than you really are... but at thè same time stimulated you actually to become more intelligent than you have ever been before... all who have crossed Cris’s path have known these moments. But each of us has known it with an inflection that is too personal, too important a part of our lives to be spoken of publicly. In all her life, I believe, Cris has never treated two people in thè same manner. She enters into thè spirit of each particular friendship, of each particular encounter as something unique that lies outside of routine or convention. Like a very much luckier Nathan Hale, I have only one regret: I have always, always been too old for Cris. Fred Licht Boston, Venice, Florence Former Board Member, Fleming College Florence Alumni parent, TASIS

__Then there was Italy to Iure me. Just fifieen kilometers over thè border there it was, wagging a tantalizing, beckoning fìnger. After France I bought our fìrst family home away from thè school campus, a derelict 12thcentwy farmhouse, my “retirement” home in thè Tuscan hills. I had always loved Florence, but instead of my actually lookingfor an appropriate school property there, a property carne lookingfor me—a beautiful, old Italian villa, just above thè Piazza Michelangelo, with a magnificent tenace looking out over sloping olive groves and a swimming pool surrounded by tali stately cypresses. How could I resisi? It had once been uscd as a fìnishing school, so sleeping space was adequate, and it had a large garage which I knew instantly would convert into a little theatre. Of course, I didn’t even try to resist, but proceeded to rent thè Torre di Gattaia and to re-open there thè Fleming College that a Board of Trustees had closed for me in Lugano. I believed, and others agreed, it was a little jewel of a junior college. But not being a brandi of a large U.S. college or university it had difficulty attracting enough students to insure its survival. Also, even though Italy is a musical-comedy country that works better without a government than with one, since thè government falls every few months, there cari stili be legai complicatiotis and taxes that turn a comedy into a nightmare. I was forced, for instarne, to instali a fire security System comprised of long hoses coiled behind glass to be broken in case offire. We are all naturally in favor of security against fire, but after thè huge expense of thè installa­ toti, thè water System of Florence went dry and was totally exhausted for all that summer so that no water carne through thè hoses! But thè fire department gave me thè license anyway, for I had installed thè required equipment and it did look impressive. God love thè Italians!...

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The cypress-lined approach to Fleming College Florence

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Torre di Gattaia’s magnificent terrace and gardens

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SEVENTIES

That Rare Combination of Qualities

Education

is

A COMPANION WHICH NO MISFORTUNE CAN DEPRESS, NO CRIME CAN DESTROY, NO ENEMY CAN ALIENATE, NO DESPOTISM CAN ENSLAVE. AT HOME

_Doth Nancy and I are most pleased to contribute a few words to thè commemorative book about that powerful dynamo known as Mary Crist Fleming. I became acquainted with her when I was Consul General in Florence and she was beginning to establish Fleming College there. Our friendship with and respect for Cris and this fine institution broadened and deepened when we attended many functions on thè Fleming College campus and, more importantly, when our two daughters became associated with thè school—Laura as an employee and Moffie as a student. Nancy and I also recali with pleasure thè many informai contacts we had with Cris such as lunch or dinner for three or four at thè Consulate or similar occasions at her hide-away home in thè Mugello. Perhaps thè most memorable and significant action she undertook which related directly to our interest was when she took on that Juggernaut of an institution known as thè University of California at Berkeley, which had had thè

temerity to question thè acceptability of certain Fleming College Florence credits which Moffie wanted transferred to Berkeley. By a stroke of luck Cris happened to be in San Francisco at that moment and Moffie called her and asked for some help. Cris dropped everything, sailed across thè Bay to Berkeley and soon convinced thè University authorities that Fleming College credits were quite acceptable. Once again, Mary Crist Fleming exhibited that rare combination of qualities—energy, enthusiasm, intelligence, and a genuine concern for others—that makes her so memorable. Thank you for giving us thè opportunity to participate in thè celebration of Cris’s eightieth birthday. Nancy and I send our warmest congratulations. Robert C.F. Gordon Washington, D.C. Alumni parent, Fleming College Florence

A FRIEND, ABROAD AN INTRODUCTION; IN SOLITUDE

She Is Always in Serene Command

SOLACE, AND IN SOCIETY AN ORNAMENT. IT CHASTENS VICE, IT GUIDES VIRTUE, IT GIVES AT ONCE GRACE AND GOVERNMENT TO GENIUS. WITHOUT IT WHAT IS MAN? A SPLENDID SLAVE, A REASONING SAVAGE. Josqih Addison

We are delighted to have your [Lynn’s] letter and to learn that you are attempting to gather some vignettes of your mother’s illustrious career and memorable character between thè covers of a book. What a delightful eightieth birthday present. The report below is of a true incident and thè personal references are from thè heart. My wife, Janet, and I have known Mary Crist Fleming since thè summer of 1964 in Lugano. Our son Nick went to TASIS for one year and our daughter Mary for two years and Mary later taught Italian at Fleming College Florence. Cris is a tower of strength and an unforgettable character. She exemplifies all of thè academic and managerial talents and with it she is stylish, witty and bold. She and I share thè same month and year of our births and we also

share a taste for an occasionai martini. One evening in thè early seventies, Cris took us to dinner at thè Cave di Maiano near Florence. When we agreed on a martini, Cris spoke quickly and with specificity to thè waiter in Italian. Minutes later at our table appeared a glass pitcher filled with ice, a fifth of gin, a bottle of vermouth, a long stirring spoon, glasses, and a soup bowl containing a doublé handful of green olives. I will never forget it. Whether directing every detail of her academic empire or presiding as a gracious hostess she is always in serene command. Happy birthday, Cris. Andy Rose Pebble Beach, California Alumni parent, TASIS

Black Chiffon Nightgown I always looked forward to my all too infrequent meetings with Cris Fleming. They were a stimulating experience, but more than that they were tremendous firn. However, thè

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vignette I offer concerns her not as a multidirectional dynamo but as a mother. On one occasion Andy and I were invited to her beautiful “casa colonica”—a lovely retreat


SEVENTIES

in thè heart of Tuscany. In thè course of thè evening Cris directed me to her own bathroom. It was as handsome as thè rest of thè house, and there I observed, floating softly from a hook, thè most lacy, diaphanous, feminine, black chiffon nightgown one could imagine. I must have mentioned it admiringly to Cris because I well remember thè affection and sentimental pride with which she identifìed it as a gift from her children.

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Janet Rose Pebble Beach, California Alumni parent, TASIS

Caviar There are two caviar stories: thè fìrst is a testimony to MCF’s staying power, thè second is more a testimony to both her obvious enjoyment of caviar and her ability spontaneously to demonstrate her hospitable nature. CAVIAR 1 I was on a recruiting trip down thè east coast of thè USA in thè fall of 1974, when I received one of those “middle of thè night” calls. I’m certain that it wasn’t thè middle of thè night, but it was that type of cali. MCF says that she wants to open up an office in Teheran, and would like to know if I am interested in running it. Having always found it very difficult to say “no” to MCF, and having nothing planned, I of course said yes. After I had been in Teheran for a few months, in early spring, MCF decided that it was rime for her to visit thè outpost. I contacted all thè people we knew in thè City and between us we put together MCF’s social calendar for thè ten-day stay. It was fairly simple, we had an event for every luncheon and every dinner for every day with thè exception of one dinner, and a few breakfasts and afternoon teas thrown in for good measure. One of thè events was a picnic up in thè Elburz mountains, with a Scotsman who was thè head of thè Iranian Oil Service Company. He drove us up into thè mountains in a range rover, with a companion and his two children. MCF was dressed for thè occasion in a white rain coat and white sneakers. Our host had not emphasized that thè temperatures for thè picnic would be in thè thirties and forties and that there would stili be snow on thè ground. MCF was totally undaunted, enjoyed

thè stark scenery, was entertaining, and cold. At every lunch and every dinner there was caviar, straight from thè nearby Caspian Sea. It was always served thè same way. A large bowl was filled with ice and an almost as large bowl was filled with caviar and placed in thè ice of thè fìrst bowl. It was thè best there was, served with plain white toast. Next to thè caviar was another bowl of ice with a carafe of vodka placed in it. The social pace was hectic. Even after two weeks of unlimited access to caviar, there was no talk about having had too much. It was a memorable visit. The Iranian parents were among thè most friendly and hospitable people I have ever encountered. CAVIAR 2 In thè summer of 1975, there were a number of Iranian children and young people attending thè TASIS English Language Program and Le Chàteau des Enfants. At thè end of thè second session there was thè usuai top-quality show given by thè children of CDE. It wasn’t so much exceptional talent as tremendous enthusiasm and excellent direction. Many of thè Iranian parents carne to thè show, and with them they brought large cans of caviar. Transporting caviar was a nuisance because it had to be kept on ice, even on thè flight. The airlines probably had to increase thè size of their refrigerators in order to accommodate thè flow of caviar. So it was greatly appreciated that so many parents had gone to all that trouble to give thè staff of CDE such delightful gifts. When we examined thè booty we found that between us we had received 5, 1 kilo tins of caviar. Unfortunately, caviar is not thè kind of

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SEVENTIES

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gourmet specialty you can keep for a long time, so there was considerable debate about how best to enjoy it. I cannot remember how, but MCF found out about thè caviar. She had an ampie supply of champagne and suitable location so she suggested to thè caviar possessors that if they supplied thè caviar, she would supply thè champagne and we could all have a wonderful party at her place, which is exactly what happened. The counselors, teachers, and various other people all went off to dress up for a delightful evening where thè champagne and caviar were excellent and thè company was even better. It was spontaneous, generous, and delightful and an excellent demonstration of thè graciousness and hospitality of MCF. Ewan Mirylees Fairfield, Connecticut Former math teacher and Representative, TASIS

“May I cali you Hope, my dear?” With that simple query you walked into our kitchen and my life. The year was 1975, thè place: thè kitchen of our Loomis-Chaffee apartment, thè excuse: you were looking for a new headmaster for TASIS. We had deliberated, Peter and I, about this occasion because, in fact, Switzerland sounded pretty enticing. Peter had returned from meeting you in New York thè previous Thanksgiving full of descriptions and thè assurance that you wanted somebody experienced and in his mid-40s. “She’ll never cali me,” he stated, “but I wish you could meet her.” After your cali, I began to wonder about “thè elegant woman in perfect black knits and mink with huge gold bangles on her bracelet” who would take a Trailways bus to Hartford for a two-hour visit. It was a memorable visit: Abby wandered down from her nap without any clothes, Josh alternately wailed and cooed, thè dog insisted on licking your bangles, thè kids from thè dorm kept interrupting, and thè phone kept ringing for you. It was In-Program Travel time and some students had abused thè rules and were in thè process of suspension. Your mission must have been accomplished, nevertheless, because after two hours we wanted to know a lot more (fortunately Ken Blessing was there too—he stayed until 2:00 AM) and a few days later you called back. You

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persuaded me to drive you to thè seedy Hart­ ford Bus Station so you could interview me (“What do you think, Hope, about a woman who interferes in her husband’s affairs?”) alone. I doubt I’ve cvcr fielded more doublé entendres! You entered our lives permanently—even after eight years away from TASIS we leap for news of you and thè school. You left your impression on us—not just Peter and me, but on Abby and Josh as well. One time, while playing Botticelli in thè car, Abby was in control. No matter what Peter and I guessed, we could not discover who she was thinking of. Her triumphant smile as she crowed “Mrs. Flem­ ing!” was great indeed. Josh stili keeps “doggie” which you gave him for his first birthday, on his closet shelf. Neither child will ever forget thè huge chocolate Easter bunnies you sent. You introduced innumerable culinary treats into our household: cappucino, prosciutto and melone are frequent reminders. I suppose you know that Peter and I refer to you as “Marna” with enormous affection and respect. Indeed, you taught me many things that my mother seems to have missed. Grace under fire, enthusiastic hospitality, a “can do” attitude and style are but four things I particularly treasure. You are one of my favorite role models because you are determined, considerate, gracious, kind,


SEVENTIES

energetic, and above all, an educator. Again and again I watched you begin your dinners in Lugano formally but end them with your arms around thè students, chatting as equals. Do you remember offering Middle Schoolers cigarettes, or Seniors gin and tonics? I bet they do, not because of thè illegality of it all, but because you were so engrossed with them you forgot they were kids. They loved it. So did we. My stories, like those of others, go on and on. I remember actually reassuring ourselves that we needn’t worry if thè Red Brigade kidnapped you on one of your forays up and down thè “autostrada del sole.” We were sure that like Red Chief, you’d be ransomed by thè Brigade which would pay us to take you back! More recently, I remember your impetuous invitation to entertain eight students from Maumee Valley at Phene Street, or last January, our hour-long phone cali at thè end of which my roommate asked “Was she your best friend

in England?” rather! I hope this book is fìlled with many affectionate loving MCF stories. I’il dose with thank yous for unending generosity, hospitality, affection and concern, friendships which will last a lifetime, for thousands and thousands of memories which range from Capitignano to Phene Street, from Lugano to Thorpe. We could not have planned seven more wonderful years! Finally, thank you for being thè only person who has made me feel good about going grey: “My God,” you gasped, “where do you have that streak done? I’ve spent thousands and never had such a striking one!” Only you, Mrs. Fleming! Happy Birthday! and much respect and love, Hope Stevens Perrysbmg, Ohio Former history teacher, TASIS

You Changed Our Lives How do I add to Hope’s eloquence? How do I write adequately to and about one whom I hold so dear? one who has challenged me so well for so long? one who has been employer, colleague, model, “mother,” teacher, inspiration, advocate? I could add thousands of memories to Hope’s; I’ve entertained them all so often. Instead, ITI try two approaches. First, Mrs. Fleming, you changed our lives. You taught us—forever—thè meaning of grace and style and truth and beauty. At leisure or under fìre, right or wrong (more often thè former, even as minority positions), ecstatic or angry, you simply define style. There is no neutral. No one ever doubts that you are there (and often we know you are there even though you are physically off in Italy or Greece or somewhere). Your wrath is formidable; your affection and love are mighty, too. And you do it all with style and flair that reminds us daily of this world’s need for taste, dignity, presence, aura, charisma and leadership. You hold opinions and we hear all of them, and we are reminded, too, that we think, and therefore we are! What a testimonial to life is your life! So should we all be expressive, bold, sharing, open, dedicated, heard, seen, effective! If some people wondered how these two strong personalities, yours and mine, managed

to get along so well (how many of your exheadmasters would say as unabashedly as I do that I love you?), perhaps it’s really because I recognize greatness and consciously submit myself to its embrace. Sure, I’ve fought it, too, and I gave my share back now and then, but you were really thè power that brought out of me whatever was best. I know that now even more than I did when I worked with you in Lugano and in England. And whatever successes I’ve had since TASIS in this profession (as you know, I’m about to enter my second headship since England) I enter at least in part on thè MCF side of thè ledger. And I am grateful.

Peter Stevens is bemused by Mrs. Fleming’s comment to Malcolm Muggeridge, while Max Page looks on

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SEVENTIES

Secondly, a few of my favorite MCF-TASIS tales can’t bear not to see thè light of this birthday of yours, for they are certainly thè stuff of legend. How often I recount your clear assertion that The Pili destroyed your early summer program in Lugano! How many times did I hear of your mad dash over thè Alps in thè sports convertible with thè Thanksgiving turkey riding shotgun? I remember your telling me of your own attempts to ski, just as I remember your utter astonishment that any sane human being would try to ski 42 kilometers cross-country as Hope and I and others did in thè Engadine Marathon for many years. I remember others’ incredulity that we had left thè infant Josh Stevens under your care when we first carne to visit in Lugano (it seemed so naturai!). And I remember your appearing one day in your work-out leotard during that visit (an early example of your continuous treatment of us as “family”). I’ll always remember thè trembles that would go through Villa De Nobili when thè news would come down from Sarah that you were on your way up from Capitignano, and we’d rush to pulì in thè towels and thè underwear off thè balconies and Myriam would hustle about and grumble, augmenting her own legends at thè same rime! How many times have we chuckled over your entertaining thè carabinieri on thè autostrada, drinks kit out and open! Or your first words in Greek, “poh pagos” for a lot of ice. You said, “If you can say ice in any language, my dear, you can survive!” Or rambling on and on through thè Tuscan hills seeking thè precisely right picnic spot; for second best would never do. I remember one excursion that nearly ended them all: thè great train ride to Scotland to find a home for thè new school! And I pair that with thè far more elegant forays into thè Geneva hinterland and Divonne-les-Bains on a similar mission. I learned a lot watching you work thè crowds in Stateside reunions. (Few people can hush a crowd so effectively just by entering thè room! I know you studied thè mug books, but even so, how do you ever remember all those names?). I have nocturnal visions of careening around thè British roads in thè black mini, you

at thè wheel, basic black, furs and bangles (“always dress as if you’re worth a lot of money when you go asking for something.”) And, of course, I remember meeting you in thè Hartford, Connecticut, bus station for our second-ever meeting, you standing imperiously center stage, derelicts with brown bags strewn on thè benches, paper cup of coffee in your hand: they gawked, and stared and rubbed their eyes. (No one in Lugano ever believed that you’d taken a public bus to Hartford to meet us! That was an apocryphal trip!). Doting on little kids (your grandchildren, ours). Catering to wealthy Iranians (et at) because they all represented something for thè future of TASIS, but reminding them all thè same that you, not they, were in charge (hardly easy for them to grasp!) The legends roll on, and you endure, centrai to them all, to thè lore, thè wonder, thè success, thè force that is TASIS. And we are grateful, for you’ve enriched our lives; we are better because we spent rime with you. And I could pay no higher compliment. I send my love, and thanks, and Birthday wishes. Peter Stevens Perrysburg, Ohio Former Headmaster of TASIS, then TASIS England

"I admit I was skeptical when. you spoke of things like nurturing our individuai senses of social responsibility and of how TASIS would give us a more complete and responsible world view. I wasn’t concerned at thè time with thè higher purpose of academic excellence that you stressed. Administrative talk of development of strong character and of gaining an appreciation of thè 'richness of thè past, thè fullness of thè present, and thè potential of thè future’ too often fell on deaf or cynical ears.

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SEVENTIES

“It is only recently, many years later, as I pian a return to thè 'luxury of TASIS’ golden hill’ (a phrase from your comments in our 1975 yearbook), that I see that thè values and commitments that you have been pursuing and engendering in your students for so many years hold true. The fact that you are and have been brave and sincere in fighting thè mediocrity, skepticism, and willful ignorance of so much of thè world is clear. I admire what you have done, especially in light of thè sometimes frustrating fact that in thè 'educatin’ business,’ thè seeds planted often do not see thè light for several years. Not everything about TASIS \A/as, or probably is now, perfect; yet I now understand and respect your efforts.” Hans Figi TASIS student, 1975 (written in 1982) Hans Figi at a TASIS

"...l’m also surprised that such an excellent yet extravagant College Prep System not only weathered thè economie world situation in 1975, but expanded as well! This is no doubt a tribute to some tough decisions by thè indomitable Mrs. Fleming, and, in no small measure, to her wisely-retained staff. Congratulations to you all! “... I have had occasion to recali fondly thè people and events which comprised my most rigorous and rewarding education experience.... I can think of no time when there was more of an intellectual demand made of me— and more fulfillment bestowed—than in my years in Montagnola. I was, in fact, overprepared for my field, having graduated [from college] with honors with little difficulty. It is a credit to TASIS' boarding school curriculum and thè genius of its well-chosen faculty. I sincerely hope to bear that standard in my own teaching career....”

Reunion

Mike Brus TASIS student, 1975 (written in 1983) "The other day I stumbled upon your speech from thè senior banquet! The more I think about it thè more it impresses me. At this point in time those values pertaining to a clean act, healthy mind and tasteful lifestyle have become thè core of my scheme. Any time I find myself slipping, I remember a time at TASIS when‘Miss Seifert managed thè halls and cellars of Villa de Nobili to a night when you thè lady of thè tower carne storming down from your summit in a nervous rage to warn us where our infamous conduct would lead. It must have been one o’clock in thè morning; thè de Nobili terrace was filled with people droppings. The room was a total mess and your scorn directed to thè missing linens on my bed. When I review these things in retrospect I think of you and all you stand for. Don't ever leave Certenago; it is you that keeps TASIS firm and intact. I am convinced of this. I might add, I hope thè merit System is temporary; I want TASIS to remain unique like a special garden with its fruits of liberty and seeds of individualism.... "You will always be thè pillar of TASIS, even in your grave.” Francys Yarbro Distefano TASIS student, 1976 (written in 1977) “I admire you greatly for your personal strength and perseverance in thè many roles you have undertaken as a woman—Lord knows it isn’t easy—and I guess something that very much increased my admiration for you was in hearing you speak about your appreciation for all who worked for you and taking time to specifically mention thè personnel (Mario, Marina, etc.) and their overall contribution to thè school (and they do contribute so muchi)....” Lucy Coco TASIS student (written in 1980)

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SEVENTIES __You win some and you lose some, so I took a look at England next. I loved England too. Actually very few of my colleagues were in fauor of going to England because they thought it would be too much competition for thè school in Lugano, so thè majority vetoed thè idea. In order to appease thè dissenters, I said I would run a market research on thè feasibility of starting a sdiool in England. The market researdx carne up totally negative, it was neither thè time nor thè place, but I ignored thè findings, as I had intended to do, and went ahead anyway. In 1976 ive bought a beautiful English property, Thorpe Place, and launched another school. We then bought thè property across thè Street and built quite a few buildings on that campus. We now bave over 600 students at TASIS England, most of whom are day students, with 150 boarders. So that was otre of thè ventures I won, instead of one of thè ones I lost. When I looked for a property in England I knew it had to be fairly near London, that’s logicai, and fairly near Heathrow Airport. Since we are a boarding school and since we wanted an international group of students, people would be coming infrom all over thè world. At first I wanted a school in thè city, because we had a country school in Switzerland, and I thought to bave an urban school from a day-school point of vieiv would make more sense. I rapidly realized that properties were very expensive; not only thè purchase, but operating in thè city would be much more expensive. Even thè purchase offood would be more costly because of transportation into thè city, and domestic help for thè same reason. Sports facilities would be a problem, and a ready good school needs a lot of sports facilities. Then I was lucky enough to find our property 18 miles outside of London, which has turned out to be a beautiful property with 35 acres. We bave lots of playing fields and room for buildings and we bave received special permits to build more buildings, even though Surrey is a very restricted green-belt area. So England has proved to be a great success— Thorpe Place, a beautiful English prop­ erty for a new school —TASIS England

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Opportune Time In thè mid-1970s, Cris Fleming decided that it was an opportune time to establish a branch of TASIS in England, despite a decrease in Ameri­ can international students caused by thè oil crisis and thè resultant relocation of American executives back to thè U.S. After selecting an ideal property for thè English branch, Cris proceeded with her usuai skill, determination and indomitable spirit to organize thè program and acquire thè property. Peter Knight, then a young solicitor with our fìrm, Baker McKenzie, in London, handled thè legai details for thè acquisition of thè reai estate,

for which thè closing date was set. After execution of thè preliminary documents, thè young solicitor wanted to discuss thè arrangements for bringing thè purchase price amount into England through thè exchange control System in advance of thè closing. One can easily imagine Peter’s concern when Cris informed him that she did not have thè funds, but first had to raise them before thinking about their transfer to thè U.K. Indeed, Peter was so concerned that he questioned me about his continued handling of thè transaction which Cris was then obligated—but seemingly unable—to complete. As we all have

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SEVENTIES

observed so many times over thè period of our association with her, Cris, of course, secured thè funds and began what now is an extremely successali program.

Roger Quinnan Winnetka, Illinois Attorneyfor TASIS since I960s

Care Package We always look forward to a brief vacation following week-long—and often tedious—annual partnership meetings; in fact, it’s what we enjoy most about them. Our 1975 gathering in Spain was a special case in point, as Cris had invited us to spend a few quiet days with her at her recently-restored casa collonica outside Florence. Throughout that meeting, Franco and thè Basques had been waging an especially tense politicai war of nerves all around us, so that we awaited Cris’s welcome with particular relish. The pian was to fly from Madrid to Milan’s Malpensa and then on to Pisa, where Cris’s caretakers would meet us for thè scenic drive up through thè hills to thè enchanting old estate. The Quinnans had not, however, anticipated thè “solidarity” that Italian labor unions would be able to muster when they adopted thè Basque struggle as their own cause cèlebre. Not only did they effectively halt all air Service within and out of Italy for a considerable rime, but they managed to disrupt telecommunications as well. As we sat, and sat, and sat,...at Malpensa, making frequent, futile attempts to ring up both Cris and thè Lugano campus, we became increasingly frustrated (and not a little embarrassed) with our inability to connect, while at thè same time we saw our vision of an idyllic visit slipping away.

As we were about to resign ourselves to an airport “ovemight,” a pilot (undoubtedly just recovered from a strike-induced “blue flu”) appeared and headed for thè cockpit of thè piane that had shared our 12-hour wait. Finally, we were on our way. Upon arrivai at Pisa, not only were we greeted with smiles by thè weary caretakers, but a portable bar with our favorite scotch and ice sat clinking in a handsome leather pouch at our feet in thè waiting car. Dim-witted or just plain tired, we somehow failed to realize what thè latter was or that it was, indeed, intended for us. Much later, after being comfortably settled in for thè duration, as we sat, relaxed, by thè pool enjoying a drink while beautiful steaks for a very late supper began to sizzle inside, Cris suddenly mused aloud, “And how did you fìnd my little ‘care package’ in thè back seat?” The discomfort we felt at our inordinately late arrivai and at causing this dreadful inconvenience to Cris made us temporarily unmindful of just how gracious, how ingenious, how lavish, and how blessed with equanimity this grand lady is! Jean and Roger Quinnan Winnetka, Illinois Alumni parents, Chateau des Enfants

A Black Sheath Dress and Black High Heels It is with much gratitude that I write this small contribution to your 80th birthday memory book. One of my fìrst memories of you dates from September 1976, before thè opening of TASIS England, when thè campus was in thè throes of thè fìrst of many summer transformations. You were wearing your work garb—a black sheath dress and black high heels—and were carrying a large lamp across thè pebbled courtyard to its appropriate resting place. The green VW bus in which you ferried things around was parked nearby outside Tudor House, soon to become my resting place. I

140

remember stili thè intimacy of that fìrst candlelit opening faculty banquet, hearing thè story of thè yellow Sestini moving vans and thè four-child ‘fìrst family’ (three of whom I eventually taught) so enthusiastically received by you and Lynn in thè make-shift Tudor House admissions office. The determination, courage and vigor with which you founded this very special school have never wavered and have been an inspiration to us all. The transformation to thè TASIS England of today is quite incredible. Despite thè fact that we now number nearly five times as many


S E V E N T I E S

students and staff, thè spirit and vision with which you have imbued thè school remain thè same. The greatest legacy which I shall carry with me is thè inspiration of your unflagging conviction that “it can be done” (on time!) and thè example of your graciousness and kindness. I wish you a very happy 80th birthday—may

you be around for another 80 (it wouldn’t surprise me at all!). Diana Dearth TASIS England, Thorpe Head of Upper School

The Most Elegant Mini on thè Entire Isle I spent a lot of my time at TASIS working with abstractions. Whether I was teaching thè ESL American History class about thè United States Constitution or writing a brochure that would sell TASIS to parents in Dubai, Singapore, and Texas, I was constantly aware that thè institution for which I worked put great stock in abstract notions: “thè dream of an American education with Europe as a campus”; “thè ideal of International understanding.” I recali these notions, of course, as being inseparable from thè identity of thè school’s founder and direc­ tor, who at any formai occasion would pause at some moment in her speech, raise her eyes from thè faces in thè audience, and, fixing a smile on some spirit in thè air, speak of Purpose, Responsibility, Character, and, most broadly, Education. I continue to be impressed by how, rather than being fluffy rhetoric, those abstractions became things I actively believed in. At thè same time, I find equally lasting meaning in thè more concrete aspects of my acquaintance with Mrs. Fleming. Anyone can recali dozens of specific details from Mrs. Fleming’s fife; one in particular that Comes to my mind is thè black Cooper Mini she kept (and, for all I know, stili keeps) in England. Almost as soon as I arrived at TASIS, I started hearing about Mrs. Fleming’s privileged relationship with thè internai combustion engine. Stories of thè early days of The American School in Switzerland were inextricably linked to legends of trans-European rides in VW buses. The white Volvo I had seen many times, parked in thè driveway of Casa Fleming on thè Lugano campus: a study in potential energy, a machine that in a moment’s notice might zoom away to Florence, its operator (so thè myth went) holding a gin and tonic in one hand a dictaphone in thè other while Balthasar thè German shepherd sat calmly in thè passenger seat and thè car guided itself.

When Mrs. Fleming started TASIS England, along with deciding who was going to be headmaster and what color thè drapes would be in thè parlours, she had to pick out a British car. This one needn’t be something for thè Autostrada; rather, it would need to negotiate London streets easily. The Mini was a practical choice. At thè same time, despite its small size, and perhaps in part because of its impeccable black finish, it looked like thè most elegant Mini on thè entire Isle. Once, I got to drive it. It was thè summer of 1979, I think, when Claire and I were teaching at thè TASIS England Summer School. Mrs. Fleming had rushed off to thè Continent, leaving her car at thè Thorpe campus and taking a cab to Heathrow; she would return in a couple of days and go from thè airport directly to her house in Chelsea, where she would need thè car. Someone therefore had to drive thè Mini into London. As soon as I pulled out of thè school driveway, I was impressed by thè Mini’s zip. This was a car that, like its owner, wasted no time. It cruised through thè trafile in Staines like a dolphin in a sea of turtles. It hummed northeast toward London as if it were running on a track. And as I drove along, I felt myself drawn gradually to a more private part of Mrs. Fleming’s life than thè many parts of it that intersected with thè lives of thè faculty and students. This feeling, logically enough, carne from being in a place that Mrs. Fleming most often occupied, not as thè center of an animated group, but alone. In place of my own foot, I imagined on thè Mini’s gas pedal Mrs. Fleming’s shoe; on thè steering wheel, thè hands that had greeted thousands of students and their parents at receptions and graduation exercises; watching through thè windshield, thè eyes that could look at an unused, run-down carriage house and see a dormitory where boys or girls from

King George

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1941 NEW YEAR MESSAGE TO THE EMPIRE: I SAID TO THE MAN WHO STOOD AT THE GATE OF THE YEAR —‘GIVE ME A LIGHT THAT I MAY TREAD SAFELY INTO THE UNKNOWN.’ HE REPLIED, ‘GO OUT INTO THE DARKNESS AND PUT YOUR HAND INTO THE HAND OF GOD. THAT SHALL BE TO YOU BETTER THAN A LIGHT AND SAFER THAN A KNOWN WAY.’

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SEVENTIES eight different countries would dangle their Her neighborhood was lovely, quiet, sneakered feet over thè sides of wooden bunks welcoming. In my memory it seems as though as they read Orwell, listened to Led Zeppelin thè sun was shining through thè leaves of many (hardly her kind of music, but that wasn’t thè trees, and all thè doorways were painted white. point), and waited until thè snack bar would I found thè right house, walked up thè steps, open. As thè buildings on either side of thè and slipped thè key through thè mail slot. In road became taller and thè flyovers more freLugano I had actually worked in an office in­ quent, I thought about how, for all her gifts as side Mrs. Fleming’s own house. Here in Lon­ public speaker, overseer, hostess, and enterdon, I carne no farther into her domicile than I tainer, Mrs. Fleming must accomplish a great would have if I were thè postman. No matter; I could imagine Fleming parties in Chelsea as deal during thè times when she was by herself, they were in Certenago (albeit with less of thè away from company. What value there must be for her in those times when she was not simul- conversation in Italian). I could imagine Mrs. taneously speaking to one person, hugging Fleming enjoying good tea and a few moments another, and handing a drink to a third; times of rest before a day of phone calls and when she was not meeting with thè governing meetings. I could imagine thè subtle satisfacboard, negotiating a loan, or reminding thè chef tions of living in a genteel, refined quarter of that there must be at least 400 petits fours tonight. thè greatest city in thè Old World. Before walking up to thè main Street in At those times, what did she think of? The search of thè nearest Underground station, I school, surely, as always. Someone who works glanced at thè Mini once more. It sat neatly at her pace is bound to use thè privacy of an where I had parked it by thè curb, looking as automobile as a time to collect her thoughts polished as a diplomati Rolls, only more inand discover new ideas that she will bring up at thè next planning session. But perhaps when viting. More adventurous, too. she was driving, her mind sometimes ran to John Stijler other things—details of her personal life that Florence, Massachusetts were not included in thè TASIS folklore, or Former English teacher and thoughts about interesting things she did not P.R. writer, TASIS have time to do (play golf? write poetry?). I don’t know about those things. I’m not even sure they were part of her thought processes; if thè only thing she thought about was TASIS, she had plenty to think about, and plenty to be happy about. But I like thè idea that there is a private Mrs. Fleming as well as thè public one. I had no trouble keeping my eyes and mind on thè road. For one thing, I wasn’t in a million years going to be responsible for so much as a scratch on this automobile, inside or out. For another, thè car handled so well and was so exciting to drive that being in traffìc was a pleasure. For another, I had to figure out how to get to a part of London where I had never been before, find thè smallish Street where Mrs. Fleming’s house was, and then park.

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__Then I was persuaded to look East. I didn’t particularly want to, but I was persuaded to look in Greece, and that school, TASIS Hellenic International School, is stili going strong with almost 400 students, exclusively day. We started out wanting a boarding school there, and in fact, we did bave a boarding school there of 175 boarders, TASIS Greece. Then politically Greece became difficult in terms of its starne toward Americans. They were very anti-American because of our bases, so we moved thè boarding department to Cyprus, which was another Fleming folly, one of thè ones that you might say I lost itistead of won! The school was successful but financially it was a loss. The people who were there loved TASIS Cyprus and it was on its way to becoming a good school too, but then thè oil market feti in Saudi, and most of our students carne from that part of thè world. We stayed on in Greece with a day school, but we are again concerned because thè school is in a rented property. Do we want to stay in Greece on a long-term basis, and is it worth investing to purchase iti a countr)' so politically unstable? That’s one of those decisions I am supposed to make tomorrow, or thè next day, or thè next week. I have had a few setbacks, of course, but I nevcr tose any sleep over them. I just go onto thè next project because you can’t expect to win them all. One does make mistakes. Sometimes mistakes are made because of other peo­ ple, when you allow other people to influetice you. I trust my own instincts more than 1 do almost atiyone else’s. It is usually when I am influenced by others that Iget into trouble.... Campus of TASIS Hellenic International School

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The Grand Entrance The secret behind many people’s ability to get ahead in Life, it has been suggested, is their mastery of thè art of thè grand entrance. If that talent were thè sole measure of success then Mary Crist Fleming ought to own 500 schools and not just 5. I am very much a man of fìrst impressions and my response upon seeing Mrs. Fleming for thè fìrst time, descending thè stair at thè Hotel Cecil in Kifissia in February, 1979, coiffed to thè nines and clad in her basic black and pearls, high heels clicking loudly on thè marble, was “here Comes trouble”. There was a great deal of hearsay and rumor swirling around thè person of Mary Crist Fleming in thè international school circles of thè late 1970’s—how she opened and closed schools as a kind of perverse hobby, how she doted on thè company of handsome young men and her flask of martinis, how she ran her empire with thè grip of an iron lady to thè extent that Mrs. Thatcher took her as a role model. With thè knowledge that she had come to Athens to establish yet another international school right across thè Street from my own was cause for interest, to say thè least, if not sheer terror. As it turned out she was no trouble at all. The charm factor is always immediately present behind her grand entrance and it carne remarkably to thè fore as we drove to a locai taverna for dinner in our old clapped-out VW school bus. It was not her style—neither thè taverna nor thè VW bus—but she bore up splendidly and regaled us with wonderful stories all thè while sizing me and my partner up just as we were trying to make some kind of sense out of her. What she got for her sizing up was that my partner and I, having built up our school from 25 students over thè past eight years to 500, were ready to let someone else deal with all thè problems that running a school in Greece can engender. We both agreed that Mrs. Fleming could take on thè Greeks and walk away smiling. There have been some difficult moments for TASIS in Athens since then, I gather, but ten years after thè fact she is looking for property to buy. It looks as if thè Greeks are going to have to cope with TASIS and 1992 whether they like it or not. Cris Fleming and I have kept in touch over thè years, usually when we find ourselves in London, and more than once I have been treated to delightful evenings at Phene Street and privileged to be served meals cooked by a

hostess one would think for all her high society life could not put a meal on thè table. In fact that is one of thè better kept secrets about thè lady in question—she can cook and, on occasion, does. I remember one meal of caramelized duck breast in particular. She, of course, claimed she had burnt it, but we who also cook know better. She also knows that no matter what has happened in thè kitchen if you provide enough wine to quaff thè result down your guests will go away happy—and I for one have never left a Fleming occasion feeling bereft of vino. A number of people complained to me, especially during thè year of transition when our school merged with TASIS in 1979-80, of her single (some said bloody) -mindedness, particularly regarding projects she undertook and people she hired. I have only one experi ence with thè latter when I timidly opined as to how I thought she was making a mistake, to be told years later (after thè mistake had been fired) that I was right. Not many people have thè grace to admit their mistakes, especially when it has cost them money, but one of thè reasons that Mary Crist Fleming is here to celebrate this occasion is that she does have that grace and also even more important, thè ability to make relatively few of them. Her singlemindedness may be mellowing, though. When we last had dinner in London in November of 1989, she actually accepted thè fact that thè French restaurant off thè Edgeware Road into which we were crammed did not serve Bour­ bon without demanding why not and sending thè terrifìed waiter scampering into thè night to find some. She seemed far more intrigued with my friend, a young (and I suppose it must be admitted, good-looking) English conductor whose early music group had just won thè Gramophone “Record of thè Year” award. Though thè theater has always been Cris Fleming’s metier far more than music, conversation never flagged and I was, once again, amazed at her ability to take charge and tread where lesser angels would fear to and emerge triumphant at evening’s end. My friend was, unaccustomedly, speechless, and cassettes of thè winning record and other samples of thè group’s wares were on thè way to Switzerland for Service in her car stereo. So, to thè overwhelming entrance factor and thè charm to back it up, we have thè sheer dogged perserverence to carry things through to thè bitter

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WINDOW, OPEN A NEW DOOR,/ TRAVEL A NEW HIGHWAY YOU’VE NEVER TRIED BEFORE,/ ENJOY LIFE’S BANQUET—RELISH THE FEAST—/ WHETHER YOU’RE IN THE WEST, SOUTH, NORTH OR EAST! Marne

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E S

end, or not so bitter, that explain thè Mary Crist Fleming success story. I have enjoyed playing a very minor role in this saga and being somewhat of a voyeur as thè saga has played itself out over thè past decade. A final bit of insight I proffer is a bit of advice she once gave me early on in our acquaintance and which goes a long way towards explaining why she is where she is today: “Never, Bob,

my dear, phrase a question in such a way that thè answer can possibly be no.” In her case I suggest it rarely has been. Robert Betts Cairo, Egypt Founder and former Director, Hellenic International School

MCF, A Very Special Person From thè moment that I first saw Mrs. Fleming driving up in her little Mini to collect me for my interview as a candidate for a position at TASIS HELLENIC International School, I have never ceased to feel like a very special person working for a very special organization. Her concern for all of us who work for TASIS has been demonstrated in so many caring ways. Images and experiences abound: MCF cooking breakfast for us, a telephone cali at home to say, “I love you and think that everyone at HELLENIC is doing a terrifìc job!” On a recent whirlwind visit to Athens MCF put in fourteen-hour days to support thè

work of faculty and staff. Times are never more exciting than when MCF is in pursuit of a goal and then we see her committed, passionate, tireless, exacting and firn loving. Dear Mrs. Fleming, HELLENIC is at your side in your never-ending quest for excellence. Kronia Polla, George Salimbene Headmaster TASIS HELLENIC International School Kiftssia, Greece

For Mary Crist Fleming, .... Who cannot be four times twenty today. We have known Cris for at least two of these decades; but by a splendid reputation, for a much longer time. As former President of thè Association of International Colleges and Universities (at thè same time President of The American College of Greece) it was inevitable that we would meet—meetings that were always stimulating and rich with her insights into fife abroad and international education, which were excepdonally rewarding. Whether it was in Lugano, Aix-en-Provence or at her gracious and impressive pied-a-terre in London, we always Cris Fleming with John Summerskill on her right and John Dorbis and Jack Bailey on her left

4

had cordial views to exchange. Cris’s reserves of imagination, energy and leadership were inspiring whether in Cyprus, London, France, or here in Athens. We always waited breathlessly to discover where she would open another center or add on her school programs from K-12, to Summer, to Universitylevel programs. We were waiting for her to open thè equivalent of thè Princeton Institute for Advanced Studies. Cris’s capacity to attract outstanding staff and work with them for thè highest level of performance always excited our admiration. Added to this efficiency is a warm, generous, stimulating, devoted person and friend whose sense of humor always kept us and her audiences fascinated. We always look forward to listening to Cris’s stories and advice. Cris, thank you for your inspiration and your friendship, and for thè many years to come.

\l Jack and Irene Bailey Athens, Greece

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E I G H T I E S

That Strong Lady in thè Black Dress I first met Cris at thè Island of Cyprus in 1983. She carne to investigate thè feasibility of moving thè TASIS Greece Boarding School to Cyprus, and I as thè U.S. Embassy Public Affairs Offìcer attended her initial cali on thè Ambassador. Although I had heard of TASIS, I was unprepared for thè onslaught I experienced at thè hands of Cris and Paul Zazzaro over thè next few days. I had not realized that she wanted to open thè school that week! We drove all over thè City of Nicosia, and Cris made side trips to other towns in Cyprus. Just as she was about to give up, one of our party suggested that there was an old hotel nearby that just might fili thè bill. Cris took one look at thè building—and declared, “it looks like a ship. PII take it.” And she did. We went through that old hotel from keel to bridge, from stem to stern in less than an hour. Cris was already redecorating it in her mind. The hotel was being used to house tour groups from thè Soviet Union and other east bloc countries. It was pretty grubby. But Cris could see beyond thè dirt. The Cypriots were absolutely riveted. Who was this woman and what in thè hell was she doing? The remaining two years of my tour in Cyprus were filled with extraordinary encounters with “that strong lady in thè black dress” as thè Cypriots described her. She was something else. She leased, redesigned, remodeled, built, contracted, supervised, cajoled, cowed, and who knows, maybe even bribed thè school into existence. When thè lackadaisical Greek Cypriot workmen did not pursue their tasks with suitable diligence, Cris explained that she had a school opening deadline to meet, and that their mother would be ashamed of them if they failed. I couldn’t believe it. She shook her finger under their noses and shamed them into working harder, just as if she were their mother. Cris knew thè importance of positive relations with thè locai community so she charmed thè Minister of Education unti! he was eating out of her hand, and she hired thè mayor as her lawyer. She made peace with all thè other private schools on thè island or at least let their directors know that they would thwart her only at considerable personal perii. The stories could go on and on. Cris Fleming has thè most powerful, personal will I have ever encountered. Cris made a tremendous impression on me in everything she did to support

thè school, but that is only part of thè reason that we became friends. I like to think that thè friendship grew out of a similarity in personalities. I have never been satisfied with where I was or with what I had. I have always wanted more responsibility, and I’ve always wanted to see what was around thè next corner. Cris could have been my mentor, and she certainly is my role model in everything I do. I’m hoping that I can emulate her energy, decisiveness, dedication, and longevity. Cris made a visit to Cyprus in thè spring of 1984 and decided to visit thè Turkishcontrolled northem part of thè island. I sug­ gested that she might wish to visit St. Hilarion, a crusader castle, situated on a high pinnacle of rock overlooking thè sea. The next morning, Cris carne to church with two friends and, of course, made friends with numerous locai expatriates. After church, she announced that they were going sightseeing. Cris was wearing her customary black dress and high-heeled black pumps—thè other ladies were similarly outfitted. Off they went. That evening we met again for dinner, and I learned first to my dismay, then disbelief, then amusement that they had done it all. Not only had they climbed thè thousand or so steps from thè parking area up to thè castle, but Cris had led her entourage beyond and up thè rugged washedout path to thè very top of thè mountain—a climb of at least half an hour—so that they could see thè “Queen’s apartments” and thè most spectacular view in Cyprus. Even thè most intrepid tourist hesitated to use this path in good hiking shoes. Cris did it in heels and looked none thè worse for wear. Her two companions were stili recovering thè next day! Then there was thè drive from Lugano to Capitagnano. My wife, Mary, and I were in Milano for a conference. We took thè train to Lugano, toured thè TASIS campus and then set off for Cris’ mountainside estate near Florence. Cris was driving her Volvo Wagon down thè Autostrada at high speed when she turned to Mary and asked if she could make a gin and tonic. (Cris is thè only person I ever knew who traveled with her own ice.) My wife, assuming that this was a question for thè record, responded “certainly.” Cris indicated a small briefcase in thè rear seat and said “light on thè gin—I’m driving!” That is when I discovered thè proper use for thè elegant gimbal devices attached to

L’ESSENTIEL est INVISIBLE AUX YEUX. ON NE VOIT BIEN QU’AVEC LE COEUR. St. Exupery,

Le Petit

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thè dashboard (fascia) of thè car. I had assumed that they were designed to hold coffee cups. Wrong! The cocktail glasses in thè bag fit perfectly. I so admired this solution to a recurring problem, how to keep beverage containers upright in a moving automobile. Several months later, I received a small package in thè mail. Cris had a duplicate set of gimbal cocktail glass holders made for my car. That’s Cris. Mrs. Fleming, as she is known to our children, has become thè family hero figure. We’re not related, just sort of adopted by extension. Our son, James, who is now a Junior at Boston University, spent his sophomore high school year at TASIS Cyprus. Cris liked to kiss him, but, James, at that point a very shy boy, blushed scarlet. Cris took pity and shook hands instead. Cris visited our home frequently and our two younger daughters carne to know Cris well. My wife’s sister, Anne Elam, and her soon-to-behusband, Chris Jaeger, both taught at TASIS. It became a family enterprise with Cris as thè godmother. Our youngest daughter, Laurie, said it all one day when she announced “I want to be like Mrs. Fleming.” She said that after being queried as to her interest in becoming a doctor, lawyer, or jet pilot. I carit think of a career pattern or role model that I’d rather endorse. Cris has followed her instincts to overcome any obstacle in her path to achieve her goals and those goals have always revolved around quality. That is not to say that Cris has always had perfect vision. That would have made it too easy. But she has been as magnificent in defeat as in victory and just as undaunted. TASIS Cyprus went belly-up because of factors completely beyond Cris’s control, but

TASIS Greece is roaring along because of Cris’s success in a public campaign to get thè Papandreau government to cease and desist in its efforts to harass thè school out of existence. The dispute even became thè subject of editorials in thè New York Times and thè Interna­ tional Herald Tribune. The Geneva project was not realized and, as I write, TASIS France’s future is unclear. But TASIS England, TASIS Switzerland, and TASIS Greece are healthy as can be. Cris has always been up for anything. If she has periods of depression, they must not last more than micro seconds. Cris is truly at home anywhere. Of course she is very effective at thè level of thè Embassy cocktail party or thè dinner for senior govern­ ment officials, but she is equally at home at a picnic amidst Greek or Roman ruins. I had Cris and Adele Wells to lunch at thè White House a couple of years ago. We were escorted to thè small executive dining room and lunched at thè same table used by then Vice President Bush. You would have thought Cris owned thè place. The White House Staff appeared to sense that she was a very important person and behaved accordingly. Their unctuousness and deference were all toward her—not me. I suppose that they all realized how fortunate it was for thè President that Cris chose not to follow a career in politics—that she found honest work instead. Dan Howard Arlington, Virginia Alumni parent, TASIS Cyprus

Take Control of Events “Now isn’t this a lot more fun”

lhis picture was taken thè year (1980) I was deciding whether to allow myself to be lured to TASIS. In thè background is Lake Trasimeno, thè very same lake on which Hannibal was forced to make some big decisions. Perhaps his success there influenced my mental process. Anyway, I was taken there by Mrs. Fleming on a freezing cold December day, together with Michael, Lynn and Anna. The Volvo wouldn’t float so we opted for thè dock. “Now isn’t this a whole lot more fun than a stodgy old restaurant?” beamed Mrs. Fleming. Through chattering teeth we clicked, “Yes.” Michael was sorry only that he had forgotten his gloves.

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By 1980, I had already been on many picnics with Mrs. Fleming and on only a few had I caught thè flu. But all of them have been memorable because of thè indomitable spirit she conveys no matter how unlikely thè eventual picnic site may be. However, that is not thè great lesson I have learned from these well orchestrated soup-to-nuts moveable feasts. The great lesson is how to travel, how to turn thè chore of getting from one point to another into one of life’s pleasures, how to make thè time between events an event. In short, to take con­ trol of events and not let them control you. And keep your mouth shut about thè ants or thè icicles. Paul Zazzaro TASIS, Montagnola Administrative Director

PAUL A ZAZZARO. JR.

S&M

"(3o easy on thè bitters tHis rodivi, Paul— by ttof way— did. óeorgio finisVi fixing thè foof rack? *

Mary Crist Fleming: A Lifetime in Education ^Whatever I do with my life, I’U never get involved in education!” When Mary Crist spoke these words as a Radcliffe freshman, she had spent eighteen years living in thè Mary Lyon School in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Frances Leavitt and Haldy Miller Crist had opened thè school in September 1910, thè same month their only child was born. “Cris” had been raised in a dormitory and had gone from kindergarten to her high school graduation with her parents’ livelihood surrounding her constantly. She had had enough. She would study French in college, she would travel in Europe, she would have a serious career as an opera singer or actress. But no more schools. In September 1980, when Mary Crist Fleming celebrated her seventieth birthday, she was toasted by friends and family who have been swept up in thè whirlwind she has generated as thè founder and director of high schools, summer camps, student travel programs, a junior col­ lege, a travelling student repertory theatre, and dozens of other educational ventures. The birth­ day party guests gathered in Thorpe, Surrey, on thè campus of TASIS England, one of thè three branches of thè American high school in Europe to which she has devoted thè richest years of her life. Two days after thè party, she was driving her white Volvo across Europe to Lugano, to welcome thè faculty at thè beginning of another school year at The American School in Switzerland. The day after that, she

was flying to Athens, to speak with seventy teachers at TASIS Greece. The following day she was back in Switzerland to welcome 200 arriving students; twelve hours later she was flying back to England to attend thè opening of school in Thorpe. At each of these campuses, thè lives of students are being deeply touched by an elegant, enthusiastic, idealistic lady—“a crazy old woman, really,” she says of herself—who never ceases to amaze everyone with her charm, her versatility, her good sense, and most of all thè tremendous energy which she puts into running excellent schools designed to offer something special. People who Uve and work around Cris Fleming assume she is famous. She occupies so many places and is in touch with people on every continent. But to thè extent that she is truly famous—“infamous,” she declares—it is largely because she arrived in Le Havre in June, 1955, on a steamer from New York, “with four children, half of them mine and half borrowed from friends, seventy-two pieces of luggage, and four cases of peanut butter,” packed them all into a new Volkswagen bus, and drove non­ stop to southern Switzerland, where she had rented a small villa in Locamo to use as a summer camp. Three days later, having crossed thè Gotthard Pass at midnight, she arrived at thè villa, cargo intact at three o’clock in thè morning. She got out of thè bus, looked at thè stars over Lake

An early graduation at Frog Hollow Country Day School

^

-

aafc A recent graduation at TASIS

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Maggiore, and suddenly realized she was dreaming of something much bigger than a summer in Europe with a handful of students. Her dream was to encourage young people to appreciate cultures different from their own, to discover thè value of learning other languages, to develop their independence. She was excited by thè opportunities Europe offered her to do this. Three months later, she welcomed thè first students to The American School in Switzerland—TASIS.

AUTO STRADA

We must adjust TO CHANGING TIMES AND STILL HOLD TO UNCHANGING PRINCIPLES. Julia Coleman (President Carter’s H.S. teacher, in his inaugurai address)

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The rapidity with which this school carne into being reflects Cris Fleming’s approach toward doing anything: she acts as fast as she can. The growth of TASIS in thè next 25 years from one school to three, during a time when many independent schools have foundered and some have been obliged to merge in order to survive thè economie pinch of thè last decade, is evidence of her superb business sense and her sheer nerve. And thè richness of thè education offered by TASIS, TASIS England, and TASIS Greece is a result of her own enthusiasm for adventure, for European life and culture, for travel, for art, and drama; of her interest in young people; and of her talent for infecting her associates with thè same enthusiasm. Her role in education is in some ways a throwback to another era, in some ways that of a pioneer, and in many ways unique. Whereas independent schools normally are non-profìt corporations supervised by boards of trustees, Cris Fleming is thè owner and proprietor of all thè schools she has created. “Mother would never form a board to control thè schools,” says her daughter Lynn Fleming Aeschliman, Assistant Director of thè TASIS schools. “She wants to feel free to act individually—to act immediately to solve problems she sees, and to be able to implement immediately creative ideas.” The direction these schools take is intimately linked with her own personality.

Although thè days are gone when she personally escorted groups of students “five minutes younger than I was” around Europe, or when she stormed through dormitories delivering tirades on thè importance of keeping one’s room tidy, her mere presence on one of thè TASIS campuses is felt by everyone— students and headmasters, gardeners and chefs. In her way, she is as powerful a force in students’ lives as Frank Boyden was when headmaster of Deerfield, except that whereas The Headmaster was visible daily at his desk in thè main corridor of thè school, La Signora Direttrice leaves thè day-to-day running of each school to others, while she works tirelessly on thè long range development of TASIS. In 1983 it will be fifty years since she willingly set aside her vow not to follow in her parents’ footsteps. When she graduated from Radcliffe, Mary Lyon School needed her help in order to survive thè Depression. Then, as now, she knew how to face immediate practical necessities without letting these necessities make her feel deprived of her dreams. She helped. She lived in a dorm again. On a budget of ten dollars a day she set out to recruit more students. When Mary Lyon survived thè Depression, only to find its buildings taken over by thè U.S. Navy during thè war, she moved thè entire school to thè Barbizon Plaza Hotel in New York—thè first of many hotels in which her schools have found themselves from time to time—and kept classes running as usuai. When she paused long enough to reflect that thè circumstances had indeed involved her in education after all, she decided to start her own school—or schools. The first of these was Frog Hollow Country Day School, in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, and its beginnings were auspicious. It wasjanuary 1943 when she moved her family into thè farm which would become thè school. She had a two-year old daughter, her second child was due in less than two weeks, and a blizzard was burying thè roads in Lansdale. The movers balked at driving a large truck through thè snow. Eight-and-three-quarter months pregnant, she was determined to get settled in thè farm before thè birth of her son and so she drove thè truck herself. Such blithe determination has characterized her meeting of thousands of “impossible” deadlines ever since. So has her aversion to sitting stili. “Sit stili? Stand stili? There’s no such thing,” she insists. “You either go forward


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or go backward.” In retrospect thè move to Europe seems inevitable. Even so, she moved barely fast enough to keep ahead of thè enthusiastic response from American students for a high school in Europe, with travel as part of thè curriculum. By June 1957, when thè second graduating class received their diplomas, TASIS had grown too big for its campus in Locamo. She found a larger villa in nearby Lugano, a quiet town with palm trees lining its lakeside walks, funicular railways climbing steep hills on all sides, elegant shops on cobblestone streets that are scrubbed clean every night, and a host of retired Germans and northern Swiss who enjoy thè sunshine and thè seclusion. In August, however, she realized that this villa was stili not big enough—and students were to arrive in two weeks. She bought two pre-fabricated dormitories to be set up on thè grounds, moved a statue of a madonna to make room for a boiler, and was relaxed and ready to greet arriving students and their parents. Two years later, when thè school grew even larger and had to move again, she packed up thè pre-fabricated buildings and moved them, along with thè rest of thè school’s paraphernalia, three miles up thè road to thè new campus. Fortune favors thè bold, and boldness is a Crist family characteristic refìned to its essence in this tali, strong lady with her brown-andgray hair swept neatly up from her forehead, her eyes flashing, her rich full voice ranging freely from serious tones to hearty laughter with equal ease in French, English, or Italian. “Learn to make decisions!” her father told her. “Make a decision—right or wrong. But leam to make decisions!” Decisiveness and selfassurance have brought her success in an environment which was not immediately ready to accommodate itself to her. The owners of thè fìrst villa in Lugano eventually made other plans, and Cris Fleming found herself and her school facing eviction. But not if she could help it. She decided to look for a wealthy supporter, someone who could step in, buy thè villa, and then let her continue leasing it. One such individuai appeared in thè person of Baron Heinrich Thyssen, Steel magnate and owner of thè largest private art collection in Europe. The Baron and Mrs. Fleming discussed terms whereby he would buy thè villa. Another interested investor carne along, however, and proposed terms she liked better, so she wrote to thè Baron to decline his offer. The response was a phone cali from Thyssen’s lawyer, who told

her, “You do not turn down Baron Thyssen.” “Of course I do!” she replied promptly. “Someone else offered me more.” Impressed, Thyssen suggested a second meeting, but by now Mrs. Fleming was in Mallorca on vacation with her children. Stili, she wanted to hear what thè Baron had to say, so she flew back to Switzerland, leaving her son Tom to drive himself and his sisters, Gay and Lynn, back to Lugano. Tom was fourteen years old—and reputedly thè only person who had been able to get a VW bus up and down thè steep driveway in Locamo. Whether or not it was because Tom had nearly been born at thè wheel of a moving van in a Pennsylvania blizzard, his mother had complete confidence in all her children’s ability to take care of themselves. While thè three of them were on their way home, thè Baron was agreeing to her terms. Cris Fleming has known Switzerland well since thè year she spent in Lausanne as a high school student there. Lugano combines thè advantages of Swiss stability and Italian culture. On thè whole this was an ideal location for her to start a school—unless, perhaps, one considers thè problem of her starting any kind of corporation in a country where women did not even vote, much less run businesses. When she began applying for loans, she found herself in thè offices of bankers who had never done

"Boldness is a Crist family characteristic refined to its essence in this tali, strong lady'

business with a woman before, and who were unsure how to deal with this woman in particular. For her part, she has always shown thè same self-assurance—and thè exceptional busi­ ness acumen—which impressed Heinrich Thyssen, and thè bankers in time became similarly impressed.

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“She insists on dining by candlelight"

“...but they were Italians and I was a woman, so what could they do?”

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One Swiss banker was so impresseci, over twenty years ago, that he left thè bank and became TASIS’ business manager. Walter Winiger’s familiarity with thè people with whom Mrs. Fleming had to deal was endlessly valuable, from thè day he stopped her as she was going downtown, wearing a fur coat and heavy jewelry, to apply for one of many loans. “For heaven’s sake,” he told her, “leave your furs and bangles at home! You just cannot dress like that if you want to make a serious impression on thè Swiss bankers.” Actually, she looks good in furs and bangles. Her style is classically elegant, not showy. She likes black dresses. She wears a bracelet of gold coins—”as many as I have mortgages,” she laughs. She insists on dining by candlelight, with fresh flowers on thè table, and TASIS students have candles and flowers at dinner. Her preferences keep TASIS from taking on an institutional appearance; furniture in thè salons of thè three schools includes many antique pieces. “In thè early years, second-hand fur­ niture was all I could afford, and I didn’t like modera furniture anyway. The things that have survived thè wear and tear of thè school have increased in value.” Her way of getting problems solved quickly impresses students too. The move to Lugano called for a new school catalog, complete with color photos which would show thè charm of thè villa’s gardens and thè gorgeous view from thè campus of Lake Lugano and thè Alps in thè distance. By thè time remodeling was completed and school was well under way, however, there were no more flowers in thè garden, and thè grass had turned a dull grayish brown. Alumni from that year stili recali with delight how they posed for pictures. Mrs. Fleming bought some sod and some plastic flowers. Students wore bright spring clothes under their winter overcoats. On a signal from thè photographer they quickly stripped off their coats, clenched their teeth to keep from chattering, and smiled among thè flowers. If plastic flowers for a set-up “spring” photograph smack of artificiality, it is probably fair to say that there is a healthy measure of theatre—some of it rehearsed, most of it improvised—in Mrs. Fleming’s life. Her reai love of theatre is very deep to begin with, and she gives a sense of drama tó thè events that surround her. She commands a meeting-table or thè podium at an all-school gathering as she might command a stage. She is not a show-off,

and she does not take thè spotlight away from anyone else. Rather, she cares passionately about thè success of thè schools; she devotes her energy and drive to this goal, and she makes full use of her talents and all thè energy and initiative possessed by everyone who works for TASIS. Behind all her efforts there is an oldfashioned sense of responsibility. “Power is trust,” she says. She is comfortable with thè fact that she personally Controls these schools. If a dramatic style of self-expression sometimes serves as thè most effective way for her to project to others her sense of responsibility and her sense of what thè schools ought to be, then she will make use of any dramatic skills she possesses. The message she delivers is reai. One of thè most popular traditions at The American School in Switzerland grew out of another of MCF’s moments of inspiration in thè face of a problem. In 1959, when thè school outgrew its first Lugano villa, she moved it to Montagnola, a village which overlooks Lugano from thè Collina d’Oro, thè “Hill of Gold,” covered with chestnut forests and punctuated with small clusters of stucco buildings, among them thè 17th-Century Villa De Nobili, now thè main building on thè TASIS campus. In typical form, she moved thè school into thè villa with a speed that took her helpers’ breath away. “The plumbers and carpenters insisted that thè building couldn’t be ready in time for thè opening of school,” she says, smiling bemusedly, “but they were Italians and I was a woman, so what could they do?” Her eyes

twinkle coyly when she says things like this. She acts as if it is her femininity, sometimes, which enables her to get what she wants, but in reality what impresses people—male or female, Italian or Swiss or British or Greek or American—are her warmth and her strength. Stili, thè villa had no centrai heat, and installation would require three months during


E I G H T I E S

which time thè building could not be occupied. Reasoning that no one’s education in Switzerland is complete without knowledge of thè Alps, she moved TASIS to a hotel in Andermatt for thè winter months. One morning breakfast was served as usuai in thè villa dining room. During thè day, desks, mattresses, library books, blackboards, maps, and thè pots and pans from thè kitchen, not to mention thè chef himself, were moved high up into thè Alps. By evening thè entire school was in Andermatt, dining off its own china, candles and flowers included. Classes met as usuai, except that thè sports program was modified in thè predictable way: everyone took ski lessons. Every year since then, even with thè heating System long since put to work, all TASIS students and teachers spend two weeks in thè Alps—St. Moritz, now—injanuary. Classes meet in thè early morning and early evening, with thè rest of thè day for skiing and for discovering a very different part of Switzerland. Picture-postcard views of thè Swiss-Italian lakes, skiing in St. Moritz, twice-yearly trips to Florence, Paris, Vienna, Rome,—these images might well be thè main excuse for having such a school as TASIS. In fact, however, TASIS is no jet-setter’s play school. First of all, it is an excellent school academically; second, it has developed over thè years a diversified student body: a few basically prep-school-oriented students; many students from other countries; and many American students who would be going to public schools back in thè U.S., except for thè fact that their families live overseas. The European setting and thè boarding school intensity attract faculty members with imagination, and thè vitality of TASIS depends on their initiative and their energy. Typically they are liberal arts college graduates, wellprepared in their academic fields. They teach high-powered advanced placement courses, solid English and math, arts... and they are constantly called upon to be versatile: drive a vanful of students to thè opera in Milan, lead a hike up an Alpine valley, organize a bicycle trip in southern France, think up ideas for parties, show students thè museums of Florence. In short, they do thè things Cris Fleming did herself when TASIS was smaller and when she personally chaperoned students around Europe. This versatility and desire to get as much as possible from such opportunities is communicated to students. In thè classroom they are challenged to think, and to handle substan-

SS * il* *

lil

I ■J

Early ski semesters at

rial assignments. Like many other college prep schools, TASIS boasts of seniors’ acceptances by prestigious colleges and of its ability to “teach students to mature with confidence and competence in a changing world.” Fortunately, behind thè rhetoric of thè school’s impressivelooking catalogues, there are people at work who know thè difference between a fancy appearance and thè nitty-gritty of a reai school. Just as a Swiss banker’s wilhngness to work as Mrs. Fleming’s business manager is a testimony to her credibility as a businesswoman, so thè devotion of faculty members with experience in places ranging from thè New York and Los Angeles public schools, to thè striped-tie New England boarding schools, to thè Peace Corps, is a testimony to her credibility as director of schools which deliver what they promise. In thè 1960s TASIS grew. More buildings, more students. More programs: a summer camp for children of many nationalities, a post high school year in Europe, a junior college, travel everywhere, including spring vacation trips to thè Soviet Union and to China. Mrs. Fleming herself traveled more and more. She flew to New York, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles to interview teachers, attend alumni reunions, promote thè school. She flew so much that TWA created a full-page ad around her, featuring a picture of her striding briskly across a runway. And she drove back and forth across Europe in her Volvo, German Shepherd beside her, dictaphone on thè dashboard. Secretaries typing from her dictation heard oc­ casionai clinking sounds on thè tape; she

thè Hotel Monopoi in Andermatt were thè triumph of ingenuity over necessity

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“BOOK ME ON TWA WHEREVER AND WHENEVER POSSIBLE!’

“She flew so much that TWA createci a fullpage ad around her”

Mary Crist Fleming is an American educator directing four programmes in Europe, forstudentsfrom fifteen different countries. Shetravels often, and to thè far corners of thè globe. Her travel agent quotes Mrs. Fleming as saying “Book me on TWA wherever and whenever possible, even if it isn’t thè most direct routef Naturally, Mrs. Fleming chooses her favourite airiine for her students too. Each Fall a group of 50 young people fly TWA from New York to Milan to attend The American School in Switzerland. In thesummer, children from six to twelve years of age are entrusted, unaccompanied, to TWA. Mrs. Fleming explains that thè highly personalized Service she receives in every airport from TWA ground Service agents encourages her to entrust her young charges to TWA too. “It’s as though I put one of my own staff on board to care for thè children!' Mrs. Fleming goes on to say “I have thè impression that every TWA employee is instilled with thè spirit of Service from thè outset of his training, for like any important activity in a competitive world thè only thing that finally puts thè stamp of quality on thè product is Service!’

always has a portable bar with her when she travels, and once, at a planning meeting, she quipped, “Eli never start a school in a country where I can’t say ‘ice’ in thè locai language.” (She is known for mixing strong drinks, but she is actually very temperate, holding thè same drink in her hand for an hour while she attends to her guests—or her dictaphone.) In thè 1970s, thè dollar’s decline relative to thè Swiss Frane raised thè effective cost of sending a student to TASIS to nearly doublé thè tuition at Andover or Foxcroft. Yet, during thè same period TASIS grew from being an exciting European adventure, mostly for students from traditionally private-school-oriented families who wanted some experience of Europe before going to college, to a well-established trio of international high schools for a remarkably diversifìed student body. This diversity is to a degree thè product of Cris Fleming’s business sense, her ability to fìnd new “markets” for her schools; and it is also a result of thè most inter­ national of her many dreams. For many American families, a school like TASIS is not a luxury but practically a necessity. In Africa, Asia, and thè Middle East, American employees of internationally based companies live with their families in communities where there are no American schools beyond thè eighth or ninth grade. MCF saw ten years ago that TASIS could serve these

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“Whether it is our college in Florence, our High School in Lugano, or our two summer programmes, we at The American School in Switzer­ land know that thè quality that parents and students alike areseeking is personal interest and care!’ “My experience of nearly twenty years of flying with them proves to me that TWA, like The American School in Switzerland, and its branches, insist foremost on personal concern and quality of Service. That is why I always fly TWA!’ We have found that many experienced travcllers agree with Mrs. Fleming. Ask your TVavel Agent to book you on TWA next Urne,and you’ll understand why. TWA’S AMBASSADOR SERVICE TO: NEWYORK BOSTON PHILADELPHIA WASHINGTON CHICAGO LOSANGELES SAN FRANCISCO

BOMBAY BANGKOK HONGKONG TAIPEI OKINAWA GUAM HONOLULU

PLUSC0NNECT10N$T0TWA'S35 USQT1ES

families by offering thè relative convenience of a school less far away than its stateside counterpart... and offering American children thè chance to see some of Europe while their families are living in Jeddah or Tripoli. She sends headmasters and admissions representatives to these areas, to teli families about TASIS, to convince American companies to recommend thè school to their employees. She has also broadened thè international flavor of TASIS by attracting students of many other nationalities, and by providing courses in English as a second language. Another good business move, this; but thè businesswoman has made business serve her more idealistic purposes. Here she has brought Italian, Arab, Japanese, Swiss, German, Sudanese, Kuwaiti, and American students closer together in her schools. ”TASIS believes that thè opportunity to learn from one another greatly strengthens each student’s appreciation for his own back­ ground and enhances his perspective on his place in thè modern world,” reads thè TASIS catalogue in an echo of her own words. In theory this is a prime example of education fostering international understanding. In fact thè schools meet thè challenge creditably; and many of TASIS’ non-American graduates have chosen to go to college in thè United States. During thè recession of thè ‘70s Mrs. Fleming decided that if TASIS was really a viable educa-


E I G H T I E S

donai alternative overseas, then it would not merely stay afloat; it would expand. Sensing thè demand for an American boarding school in Great Britain, she bought an estate eighteen miles outside of London and founded TASIS England in 1976. Wary of Britain’s own perilous economie state, a few disinterested spectators thought thè new enterprise was poorly timed, but questions were silenced quickly by thè suc­ cess of thè new school. Opening its doors to 135 students thè fìrst September, it grew in four years to 375 students in twelve grades, establishing itself as both a fìrst-rate collegepreparatory school and, simply, a beautiful place: a campus of broad green lawns and perfectly trimmed rose bushes that evoke thè flavor of older academic institutions in England. Cris Fleming was 66 years old when TASIS England opened, but neither her strength nor her love of new projeets was declining. Besides, bull tactics were working in what was supposed to be a bear market. More companies were recommending TASIS to their employees. With a budget nevertheless lean, thè schools were continuing to maintain high standards. In fact, thè most-heard complaint about TASIS recently has been that its standards might be too high. Conceived to build thè already well-prepared student’s cultural foundation while preparing him or her for college, TASIS has also sought applications from families who often are not college-oriented, whose children have attended schools which have put little pressure on them. Suddenly here they are, required to take three years of a foreign language and two of lab Science in order to get a diploma, and being graded stiffly. By thè beginning of 1979, parents and corporation personnel officers began saying, “We like your school, we like thè opportunities, we like thè way thè kids get to experience Europe, but we want a curriculum that gives them a good basic reading-and-math education they can handle. What can you do about it?” What else but start another school. The question ‘when?’ wasn’t even asked; Mrs. Fleming would start a new school that fall. Where? Walter Winiger suggested Athens, a major city closer to thè area most of these students would come from. How? Start small and hope to build. Mrs. Fleming got a Greek dictionary and looked up thè word for “ice.” She drove to Brindisi, took a boat to Piraeus, made arrangements for TASIS to occupy a hotel in Kifissia, a suburb of Athens, and set about planning a trimmed-down curriculum and

budget for a school that might have 80 students its fìrst year. A modest pian. But in twenty-three years of shaping TASIS, Mrs. Fleming has made thè school’s reputation too good for things to stay simple. In thè fall of 1979, TASIS Greece open­ ed with nearly 80 boarding students... and five hundred day students. As soon as it had become known that TASIS was coming to Athens, thè well-established Hellenic International School had proposed an affiliation. The growth of TASIS England had been rapid, but thè growth of TASIS Greece was fantastic. Today, this school prepares students for either American or European universities, since it offers not only American college-prep courses but also thè In­ ternational Baccalaureate and thè British G.C.E.; at thè same time, it accomplishes its originai purpose of providing solid grounding in basic subjects. Cris Fleming sits stili less than ever. One week she is supervising a remodeling project in Surrey, thè next she is in Greece... or at an alurrmi reunion in Denver. With luck she may have a weekend in between to relax at her house in Tuscany. But there is always more to do, and other people fìnd themselves hardpressed to keep up with her. Once when she could not delay any longer before setting off from Lugano for her house in Tuscany, she looked for a moment at thè pile of paperwork on her desk—work she had no time to finish now but also could not hope to fit into her briefease to take along with her. She strode to thè closet, pulled out a plastic garbage-pail liner, swept everything from her desk into thè bag, threw thè bag into thè car along with her suitease, and drove off. Her seventieth birthday was planned for weeks. The guests gathered in Thorpe, on thè campus of TASIS England. A delicious buffet, many toasts, a emise on thè Thames. Songs

“...a weekend in be­ tween to relax at her home in Tuscany"

“.. .her interest and

ir-V' <* r‘

enthusiasm for young people”

**

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with originai lyrics to thè melodies from “My Fair Lady.” A warm gathering of family and friends, many of them also her associates. To surprise her, every guest carne in disguise, wearing a mask which was supposed to contain a due to that guest’s identity. In characteristic Alexandrian fashion, Cris would not sit stili and guess identities; she scurried around thè room, trying to peek under thè masks. “Who’s that? Kate? Oh wonderful!” Eager to know everything immediately, she was vivacious as a child on Christmas. And thè next day she was driving to Lugano. In two years she will celebrate five full decades in education. And then what? Perhaps she will slow down, just a little. With her daughter Lynn’s involvement in TASIS, Cris Fleming could retire, but her old-fashioned view of work seems opposed to thè idea. Betty Cranmer, Mary Hart, Forrest Cranmer, Joan and Ted Calnan, Phyllis and Jac Rothschild, Max Page, and Peter Stevens await thè arrivai of thè birthday lady

Phyllis Rothschild,

!|:V

Forrest Cranmer, Anne van Brussel, Nicla Mambretti, Nigel Blackwell, and Betsy Newell enjoy Mrs. Fleming’s 70th birthday party

j—K,

Cris Fleming with U.S. Secretary of Education T.H. Bell

156

Speaking again of her mother’s decision not to make TASIS a non-profìt institution, Lynn points out that Mrs. Fleming has turned all thè school’s profìts back into thè school’s growth and improvement, saving little or nothing for her old age. But when she speaks of this to her mother, thè answer comes back, “What old age?” One of Mrs. Fleming’s favorite anecdotes concerns an old New England lady who refused to die until she had finished sheUing her peas. Ask Cris Fleming whether she has more peas to shell; will she start another school soon? A glint comes into her eye, and she smiles. ”Maybe France. Mm. Maybe China...” John Stifler Florence, Massachusetts Former English teacher, TASIS (written in 1981 for thè TASIS Alumni Magazine)


E I G H T I E S

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She Had a Dream

All that

is

NECESSARY FOR EVIL TO TRIUMPH IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING. Edmund Burke

Cris Fleming—a unique and an outstanding American. Yes, she has many abilities and virtues that enhance her charm and personality. But, she is defìnitely different. She had a dream—a dream to undertake an accomplishment that was much beyond thè ability ofnormal mankind. But, she did it—and most successfully. How she did it—I don’t know. I do know she did it. She built a superb American school of higher education in Europe. For many years [pre-1950s] Americans working in Europe, either on a tem-

porary or permanent basis, were without an American school in Europe. (I know from my own personal experience what it means for an American speaking English only, to attend a French university.) The President of thè United States was certainly right in awarding Cris [one ofj thè nation’s highest honors! Addison Brown Na'ples, Florida

"... I want you to know what TASIS meant to me and always will. “It was thè opportunity to meet new people, and live with them. I never knew it was possible to become so dose with students and teachers alike; and I thrived in thè warm atmosphere. “It was thè opportunity to hike a Swiss Alpine trail, and be able to look down upon thè wondrous beauty of thè country. “... With thè encouragement of teachers and students I became more confident in myself and my beliefs....I learned about living with and really getting to know people. “.... I don’t think I ever took it for granted.... We were very lucky people. “I think thè faculty and staff of thè school can be very proud of themselves for what they have accomplished, and most of all, yourself, for making dreams come true in more ways than can be described.... “There are no words which can express my thanks for what you have given me.” Nicole Leuderitz TASIS student, 1983 (written in 1984)

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E I G H T I E S

Your Gumption __ 1 here are literally thousands of persons— students, faculty, parents and friends—who are thankful for your many accomplishments. I am personally indebted to you for influencing thè course of my life; interests from art to foreign affairs were sharpened due to opportunities you gave me. Your notion of standards and education grounded in thè humanities are more per-

tinent than ever. Perhaps most of all I admire your gumption—many have dreams but few persevere to see them through as you have — Hendrik Woods Former history teacher, TASIS (From a letter written in 1984)

Famous HISTORIAN CHARLES BEARD WAS ASKED BY YOUNGER HISTORIAN OF

Presides Par Excellence

COLUMBIA, WHILE DRIVING ALONG IN MODEL T FORD,

Barbara and I had flown into Heathrow from Cologne where a group of my former students in thè Cari Duisberg program had organized a twenty-fìfth reunion party. Cris Fleming, with characteristic, really overwhelming, generosity, had invited us to spend a few days thereafter with her in London, and we were eager to see her. Because on that day Cris was presiding at thè commencement ceremonies of her school at Thorpe, we were to meet there, have lunch with thè dignitaries assembled for thè occasion, and then motor into London with her for our visit. Our piane had been a little late in landing. Saturday morning traffìc in thè towns and villages between Heathrow and Thorpe was both dense and intransigent. By thè time our taxi expelled us and our luggage at thè entrance gate, commencement had commenced. We left our bags in thè reception office and walked down a path which led to thè lawn upon which thè graduation party had assembled. The scene which greeted us could not have been equalled by Cedi Beaton, not even with a Steven Spielberg budget. June sunshine bathed rhododendrons in all thè brilliant colors of that showy spedes. Under a large tent, blue and white striped if memory serves me properly, proud parents and relatives sat in folding chairs listening to thè commencement speaker, a respected American historian whose textbook on American diplomacy had once been required reading for my students. The graduates sat facing thè audience dutifully awaiting their diplomas and honors awards and trying hard to conceal their anticipation of summer holidays and thè promise of exciting university experiences which lay ahead for them. And everyone except Ringo Starr, whose stepdaughter was thè valedictorian, was handsomely attired for thè occasion. Center stage and certainly thè center of attention sat

Mrs. Fleming, beaming on her students, listen­ ing to thè speaker with that rapt concentration which is her hallmark, her irresistible magnetism compelling thè audience to savor as she was every drop of drama in thè ceremony. Now I consider myself something of an authority on commencement exercises, having presided over twenty years’ worth of them as a university president, not to mention a good many others I had tolerated as a faculty member. I can teli you Cris Fleming presides par ex­ cellence. She takes charge, yet her audiences are relaxed and absorbed. She moves thè agenda to its finale with thè skill of an Olympic ice skater, yet she takes time along thè way to insert gracious asides and personal ob servations. She is thè essence of feminine charm. She was thè star of thè show. Since all seats were occupied, Barbara and I strolled around thè tent’s perimeter enjoying all thè wonders our eyes and ears could engagé. I mused on some of our previous times with Cris Fleming and reflected upon her extraordinary talent and thè guileless generosity which she unfailingly bestowed on us and our friends wherever in thè world we would meet; in Lugano or thè Loire Valley, in Italy or Indiana. I thought of her great zest for fife and of her inimitable style. I marveled at her intense interest in nearly everyone she met, her discipline in learning their names and thè salient facts of their lives. After thè last diploma had been handed out and after an elegant luncheon had been served and after a flurry of last minute instructions had been communicated to members of her staff, Cris told Barbara and me she was ready to take us to her house in Phene Street. But just as our driver turned on thè ignition, a scene took place which revealed thè heart and mind of Cris Fleming to me as nothing before ever had.

HOW LONG IT WOULD TAKE HIM TO SUMMARIZE ALL HE KNEW ABOUT HISTORY— A PAUSE OF TWO HOURS—‘THE MILLS OF THE GODS GRIND SLOWLY BUT THEY GRIND EXCEEDING FINE’—SILENCE, ONE-HALF HOUR— ‘THOSE WHOM THE GODS WOULD DESTROY THEY FIRST MAKE MAD’— LONG SILENCE— THE BEE FERTILIZES THE FLOWER THAT IT ROBS’— SILENCE—‘JUST WHEN THE NIGHT GETS DARKEST THE STARS COME OUT.’

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Good timber DOES NOT GROW IN EASE. THE STRONGER THE WIND THE TOUGHER THE TREES.

Three girls carne running around thè corner of thè reception center calling Mrs. Fleming’s name. The driver shut off thè engine. Cris popped out onto thè driveway to be embraced by these graduating seniors. It was a heavily emotional encounter. The girls were crying and telling Mrs. Fleming how much their educations were appreciated, how much they were going to miss TASIS, and how very much they loved her and treasured her friendship and support as they were growing up. From within thè car Barbara and I caught snatches of this scene, and we were deeply touched. We had been with Cris, surrounded by thè great and near great among her friends. We had seen her royally entertain our trustees. We had learned to admire her courage and deter-

mination as she built her schools in strategie places throughout Europe. She had all thè stuff which makes ambassadors and captains of industry. She could, we knew, do almost anything. Yet huddled with these girls in Thorpe’s courtyard we suddenly understood that Cris Fleming most of all was a devoted teacher, a superb role model for adolescent boys and girls, a woman who wanted more than anything else to make thè world better through thè lives of her students. Those girls knew that and on that sunny Saturday afternoon all at once we knew that too.

Barbara and Wallace Graves Evansville, Indiana

Whirling with Mrs. Fleming We have agonized and puzzled over this invitation to bear witness to thè incomparable Mrs. Fleming. How could we possibly do justice? How could we alight on a single occasion that would capture what Mrs. Fleming means to us? Should we catalogue her in all her various guises? Should we recali thè inimitable hostess, thè tireless traveler, thè dedicated educator and thè witty story-teller? Would we be able to capture her devotion, her attentimi to detail, her love of beauty, her extraordinary ability to engagé thè mind and heart of anyone at any time? Alas, too grand a task for us mere mortals. Always present is thè fear that instead of capturing her, we would reduce her to mere words. Is it possible, after all, to capture Mrs. Fleming? So. It is with some trepidation that we offer thè following: In a play currently staged in London, Shirley Valentine, thè title character stands alone on stage. The audience comes with some suspicion, some apprehension. A one-character play? How could this character possibly keep our attention for two hours? But quickly, astoundingly quickly, Shirley Valentine lures us into her world, and for thè next two hours we are tossed and caressed and led through Shirley Valentine’s realm. We sigh a fair amount; we laugh a great deal. We emerge, restored, thinking, “Ah! Ah life!” Shirley is trying to recapture a time in her life—and a part of herself—which she has lost of late. The former self, thè Shirley Valentine

160

self, was capricious and daring and sensitive and in all senses alive. She cannot fathom how this former self has been lost and replaced by a shy, fearful, dull woman. Midway through thè play, she experiences an epiphany in which she says (referring to her present, hollow life) something to thè effect of: “It seems a crime against God to be living such a little life. Wouldn’t He want us to live a much larger life?” She recovers thè former Shirley Valentine—thè vivacious and alive one. She had not disappeared forever; she merely has been wandering around, lost, in all thè un-used portion of her recent life. Admittedly, most of us could probably identify with being guilty, from time to time, of living too small a life. But Shirley Valentine had thè same effect on us that Mrs. Fleming has: she reminds us of this necessity to live thè larger life—always, every single day. It is diffìcult to select an isolated example of this phenomenon. One thinks of Mrs. Fleming’s effect rather like that of a collage: it is this and that and some of this over here, all pulled together. But we will try to illustrate: Eight years ago we attended our fìrst Development Board meeting at Capitignano. The Board was nodding farewell to thè departing Stevens family, welcoming thè new Riggs aboard, and conducting what we would come to realize was its ‘usuai’ and unique form of ‘business’ during three days in this idyllic mountain retreat. Other ‘guests’ included thè families of Windie and De Fleming, Lynn and Michael Aeschliman, and Kate and Fernando Gonzalez.


E I G H T I E S

After we had been housed and wined and dined like visiting royalty during thè first two days, a picnic was announced. It is this picnic which we would like to proffer as an example of what it is like to be with Mrs. Fleming. Surely thè picnic would take place on thè lovely grounds of Capitignano? Surely there was no need to go further afìeld. Ah. No. Mrs. Fleming had chosen another site. It was thè only place this picnic could take place. The group comprised a three-car caravan, with Mrs. Fleming driving thè lead car. We were riding in thè second car, and spent thè next two hours straining our necks for sight of thè elusive white volvo as it sped along thè narrow, twisting roads. Down valleys, up mountains, over streams, whizzing along through thè Tuscan countryside. “Anyone see thè Volvo?” “Isn’t this a little dangerous?” “Where are we going?” “Does she always drive this fast?” Midway through this journey, mercifully, we caught sight of thè Volvo, halted at a train Crossing. “Oh good, we can rest for a few minutes.” “Why is Mrs. Fleming getting out of her car?” “Where is she going?” “Who is she talking to?” “The railway Crossing attendant—?” “Why is she talking to him?” What is she doing?” Wait a minute— “Don’t teli me—” “He’s lifting thè barrier—” “—For Mrs. Fleming.” Well, of course. On we went. Round curves, down valleys, up mounts. Et cetera. We arrived at thè castle. It was a magnificent setting, worthy of our journey. But alas, thè gates were locked. Mrs. Fleming stepped out of her Volvo and walked off, toward a side lane. “Where is Mrs. Fleming going?” “Mrs. Fleming? Mrs. Fleming?” “She seems to be going up that cobbled lane—” “In her high heels—” “What on earth—?” “She’s knocking on thè door of that house—” “Who is she talking to?” “What is that mangiving her?” Mrs. Fleming returned with a set of keys dangling from a large iron ring. She opened thè gate. We had expected to sit on some bare stone,

to balance our paper plates delicately, to nibble cold-cuts with our fingers. Ah. But this was a Mrs. Fleming picnic. From thè back of thè Volvo poured blankets to spread across thè grass, crystal goblets from which to drink our chilled wine, china plates and silverware with which to eat our hot (especially packed in an insulated container) veal marsala, our fresh rolls, and our tossed-atthe-site salad. We sprawled out comfortably after this repast, and in thè center sat Mrs. Fleming in her white dress and her high heels, regaling us all with those stories which never cease to surprise and entertain: stories of drink kits on thè autostrada (“You never know when you will need this sort of thing”), of Michael climbing up to Lynn’s window (!), of a fourteen-year-old son driving a bus through Europe (“He was an excellent driver”), of a car of young women driving through Yugoslavia amidst flapping ducks, on and on, demurely deferring (“Oh you don’t want to hear about that!”) as we, entranced, begged for more (“But we do, we do...”). A photograph was taken sometime in thè midst of all this lolling about, and, although many such photographs are unable to capture thè essence of such scenes, this one, we think, managed better than most. In thè background one sees thè naturai beauty of thè place, and connects this with Mrs. Fleming and her love of such naturai beauty. In thè foreground are thè picnickers, comfortably grouped. There is a look on thè faces of these picnickers that says it all. It is a look that is diffìcult now to describe in words, and thè closest we can come to rendering it is to compare it to thè looks on thè faces of thè audience leaving Shirley Valentine. The look is one of pleasure and appreciation mixed with awe. It is a look which says “Ah! Ah life!” Mrs. Fleming has never lost her Shirley Valentine. She knows that you should grab at each day and whirl it around and leap through it, and at thè dose of thè day, you wring it out for a few last drops. She infects you with her leaping and whirling. Like thè audience in thè above play, you come away from your contact with Mrs. Fleming shaking your head in amazement, grateful for this glimpse of a ‘larger life.’

HOW SMALL OF ALL THAT HUMAN HEARTS ENDURE,/ THAT PART WHICH LAWS OR KINGS CAN CAUSE OR CURE./ STILL TO OURSELVES IN EVERY PLACE CONSIGNED/ OUR OWN FELICITY WE MAKE OR FIND. SamuelJohnson

Lyle and Sharon Rigg Headmaster and English teacher TASIS England, Thorpe

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A Lady Who Operates with Flair and Style

Cris greets Sir Basii Blackwell with Betty and Forrest Cranmer

Christmas in Cape Town with thè Cranmers

162

All who know her will agree that is an apt description. By way of illustration, consider how she has handled thè matter of security in her house in London. What she would have preferred would have been another handsome Alsatian like her beloved Saxon, but with so much international travel that ideal solution was not possible. Of course she has a burglar alarm, one which seems to be somewhat sen­ sitive and temperamental, as some of us in London and at Thorpe can testify. But she tends not to turn it on when she is in thè house. Something more was required to give her that comfortable feeling of security we all like to have. It so happens she has an attractive so-called

“granny fiat” in her basement with its own entrance. An ideal place to keep someone in residence who would tend to discourage possible intruders. So to augment thè defenses of thè premises she—logically—tumed to Her Majesty’s Department of Defense, just a couple of miles down Old Brompton Road from Phene Street. And what did she obtain from thè D.O.D.? To occupy thè fiat and generally keep an eye on thè property she installed an active member of thè armed forces assigned to thè locai headquarters. Some might have thought a sergeantat-arms or perhaps a chief bos’un’s mate would do. But not our Cris; she has a habit of going to thè top. A captain of thè Royal Navy, a senior offìcer of thè Senior Service, that is who she has in residence down below thè main deck, and that is why she has that nice feeling of security. He is quiet, keeps his quarters shipshape, and pays thè rent on time. Also, he is there in case of need, such as when an attrac­ tive man is required to round out a dinner party. Is there a hostess who would not be envious? We submit this as an example of how Cris does things—with Flair and Style! Betty and Forrest Cranmer London


E I G H T I E S

What Might Have Been thè Setting for Strauss’s Capriccio

‘r

At my age, I find that I have total recali of happy events that took place in thè Twenties, Thirties, Forties and even Fifties, but more re­ cent happenings become more hazy. One stili “Cristal” clear is that totally blissful time at thè Chateau Beauchamps three summers ago. There’s never been a mini-festival and seminar quite like that one. Not only was thè musicmaking by thè Brodsky’s, Prometheus, Yitkin Seow, et al, unforgettable, but so, too, was all that went with it: a fortnight of gracious living in what might have been thè setting for Strauss’s Capriccio, only, more appropriately, thè music was French, and as elegant and delicious

as thè food and wine we enjoyed daily. John Amis had convened a musical team that was immediately integrated with thè audience, but, presiding over all, and ultimately responsible for our physical and spiritual well-being during that life-enhancing experience at thè Chateau Beauchamps was our hostess, thè indefatigable and wholly remarkable Mrs. Fleming. Greetings on your birthday, dear Cris, and do let’s have a repeat performance somewhere, sometime. Felix Aprahamian Music critic, London

Ruth Goes to thè Bootblack’s Room...or thè Ritz! ^lrs. Fleming, mistress of thè Chateau, intrepid stalwart and veteran of arrivals, is poised at thè staircase to welcome thè group. These are students of an age, students from America who carne to enjoy thè “Vie de Chateau”! Chateau Beauchamps is in thè farm country of thè Sarthe, somewhere nearer Le Mans than Chartres. Not Chateau des Enfants but Chateau des Anciens. Ages 55 to 75 and glad to be alive; however, suffìcient spryness to carry your own luggage is a prerequisite for admissions.

Some are TASIS alums or parents; most are Interhostel tourists armed with good will, ready to feast eyes and palates on France in her 200th birthday. The problem started when “une dame d’un certain age” raised a fuss about her room. “You people advertise thè Vie de Chateau and I’m put in thè Bootblack’s Room!” A shudder tinged with smiles passed among those of us on thè staff. Protestations were delivered urging her to see reason: “But you have a room on thè

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The

line of

LEAST RESISTANCE MAKES RIVERS AND MEN CROOKED. Abraham Lincoln

ground floor! no steps to climb,” “only a short walk to thè Chateau for relaxation and drinks in thè saloni” No use. She is adamant she’s been sold a pig in a poke. Her mind is set to make a row. She raises her voice. The other 39 folks whisper. Some attempt is made to stili thè discouraging words. Alas, “unacceptable,” “outrageous,” “speak to thè manager” are heard echoing across thè Chateau lawn. She’s threatening to spoil thè day! Apprised of thè malcontent’s distress, Mrs. Fleming is waiting as our disgruntled “connoisseur” makes her unhappy way to thè main house for thè Arrivai Banquet. “How nice to meet you Dr.__________(name withheld). You

Mark and his lovely wife Simone Aeschliman

**v T

are welcome to thè Vie to Chateau!” But thè friendliness and outstretched hand are spurned. “Don’t touch me!” As thè evening proceeds thè Doctor (we never did manage to ascertain where she’d earned her three Phds) was seen and heard among groups of guests in thè salon doing her best to darken spirits. Something had to be done. By this time she has no intention of leaving. The darkness fades. It’s replaced by Gemiitlichkeit and congeniality. Her happiness increases. Her stay is assured. In thè meantime thè occasionai volley is heard lobbed across thè salon as her humour shifts and thè vision of her room returns. A pleasanter conversation ensues, one in which Mrs. Fleming diplomatically doublé checks that previous biliousness has abated. The “Doctor” protests: “my stay will cramp my style but, alas, seems inevitable.” At this point Mrs. Fleming rejoined with her definitive response, “Look Ruth, either you hush and start enjoying yourself or I’m driving you to thè Ritz in Paris myselfi” Need I say that Ruth reigned in her choler? While she continued erupting from time to time with an outrageous remark—a kind of color commentary on thè proceedings—she was on thè whole pacified. Such mutterings as there were became muffled by thè satisfied sounds of thè group. Mrs. Fleming’s threat of expulsion to thè Ritz had won thè day. Ruth was content for thè duration of her Vie de Chateau in thè “Bootblack’s Room.” Mark Aeschliman TASIS, Montagnola Art history teacher and Director of thè Post Graduate Program

“...Mrs. Fleming was marvelous; not only has she educateci, inspired, and guided her students, but she has thè gift of youth. As an adult I find myself stili inspired by her; I left thè reunion refreshed with a renewed outlook on my past and a positive attitude on thè future.” Kje Wynkoop TASIS student, 1969 (written in 1989) “As a mother of four young ladies (plus two granddaughters), I wish'to express my personal admiration for what you really mean: support, strength of character and above all love!!! We hope you can continue to impart those qualities to all thè people around you.” Hilda Sanchez Alumni parent, TASIS England (written in 1990)

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E I G H T I E S __As TASIS grew, I have obviously had to take on more people and delegate a lot of responsibility. I bave usually been very fortunate in having very good people as associates, people that I like and enjoy working with. I hope it is mutuai because many have been with me quite a few years, wliich would seem to prove that it is mutuai. In certain departments I’ve had to trust thè persoti in charge implicitly—thè Business Office for instance, and then thè Development and Public Relations office, all of which I used to do myself Obviously, as thè school grew it was impossible for me to do everything and I had to trust people with certain departments. There again, you win some and you lose some, so I have had a few unfortunate experiences. But by and large I am very, very lucky with thè colleagues with whom I am thè most closely associated and who carry thè most important aspects of thè school. I think now thè schools would run very well without me, but I don’t want them to discover that too soon, otherwise they might insist upon tny retirement! Cris Fleming’s dose associates, stili smiling after a Development Board meeting in 1987: (I. to r.) Lyle Rigg, Paul Zazzaro, Fernando Gonzalez, Chris Frost, John Larner, and George Salimbene.

mm—m

Of course, one of my reai problems and one of thè most important and diffìcult ones now is how to perpetuate thè schools after my death. Supposedly thè only way you can perpetuate a school is to put it into either a Foun­ dation, or a non-profit corporation, with a Board of Trustees, because thè only perpetuai group would be a Board of Trustees that would be changed one by one as members retire, withdraw, and are replaced. But I have had one very unfortunate experience with that, when I had Fleming College in Lugano. Instead of remaining proprietaiy, I created a non-profit corporation which meant I lost control, happily not of thè physical property, but of thè College itself. The timing was very bad because it was during thè period of thè revolution on college campuses in America and France, with thè “Printemps” in Paris of ’68. It was thè time when many students were in revolt, and I had given our college thè tool by which thè)’ could gain control. I resigned irrevocably. A faculty and student faction wanted to run thè show and their standards were not thè sanie as mine. They thought I would be a figurehead and a fund raiser, but that was not my idea of my role. I had strong beliefs then, as I do now, and certain standards educationally, socially, morally, and spiritually, and they did not agree with mine, ivhich is why I resigned. I evicted them from my property at thè end of that year and they established another institution. But once burned twice shy. I have come to realize that maintaining control is absolutely vital, maybe for my character; maybe I have been spoiled, because over all thè years that is thè way I have operated. The only alternative to a Board of Trustees is, of course, to have one’s family continue a family operation. My two older children are not, and never were interested in thè school, even though they are both very capable young people and very successful in their own fields. My youngest child is extremely interested in thè school. In fact she and her husband have promised to continue thè school even though they would probably have a different style of operation. Right now my son-inlaw is in education, and is a superb college teacher. And for now Tm not willing to retire. I’m not thè retiring

Science sans

CONSCIENCE, CE N’EST RIEN QUE LA MORT DE L’AME. Rabelais

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Never resent

GROWING OLD. THINK OF THOSE TO WHOM THE PLEASURE IS DENIED. Einstein

My daughter Lynn, son-in-law Michael, and my two grandchildren, Anna and Adrien

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sort. What would I do if I retired? And yet it’s foolish of me to think that I can go on indejìnitely. What I ready want to do right now is start another school, but nobody wants me to do it! Education in America has become deplorable. That’s one reason why I feel even more intensely that we have to do a strong job over here to try to counteract some of thè poor education in thè States. Our young pcople are not going to be able to compete in thè exciting modem world that is developing right now because so many of them are not trained. Many American schools have not been strong enough, discipline has been lacking, they have down-graded thè curriculum so that it has become more and more soft and less and less of a reai education. Many Americans have become more or less illiterate; they can’t even write good English. Our public-school System is totally inadequate. I feel even more committed to making our schools very strong schools academically, which we have been successful in doing. In many ways we have much more freedom to be demanding in our curriculum by virtue of being a proprietary school. We require 18 credits to graduate. Students are required to take three years of Science, three years of math, three years of history, four years of English, and three years offoreign languages. They don’t have moni for more than one or two elective courses and one of them has to be Humanities—Humanities, thè story of Western Civilization—to teach our students thè values of our remarkable heritage and thè need to preserve and defend it. Music, art and theatre we have classified under electives because that is part of being a well-rounded person, but essentially tliose are extra-curricular activities which one offers in a boarding school. I think even failures are important, so I have never felt badly when people say I should never have gotte to Cyprus or Greece or France, or I should never have dotte so and so; perhaps I shouldn’t have, but I think it all had some validity and it may show thè way for other expansions or other enterprises. I think in generai thè things that you have not done are thè things that you regret. It is never thè things I have dotte, it is always what I have not done that I have regretted. And there haven’t been many of those! I have been very blessed and have had an extremely happy life, as well as thè fortune of good health. I offerì feel I am thè richest woman in thè world with my own three very special children, and to live daily in thè world of hundreds of wonderful young people, to be surrounded by them and responsible for them. I love my work, which is why I udii never retire. People are lucky to be able to work, to have health and interest to do so. And it is a foolproofformula for how to grow old! Creating something worthwhile is exciting, challenging, and rewarding. I am sure my daughter, Lynn, who will succeed me, will be like Iter old mother, aware of thè challenges and needs in this world attd committed to making this planet a better place to live in, tiot only for us, but for future generations.


T R I B U T E S

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T R I B U T E S

Familiar Faces of Friends from Many Places With Richard Blackwellf of Oxford and Michael Aeschliman on a dog walk in Tuscany

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With Richard Adamanyf, Dean of Fleming College

With Pres Tolman on a

Florence, at Lynn’s

fishing trip

wedding

Strolling in elegance with Richard in Tuscany

Myriam Guscetti and Gai load thè mini for MCF at Torre di Gattaia

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With Gertrude Burnst (Burnsie) in Haiti With Van Cliburn before a concert in Lugano .. .and Guy Tolman and Gai on a picnic

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Victory smiles with Alex Korach of Zurich

With Pasquale Trisorio from Naples With Giovanni Flores of Florence and Betsy Newell at Capitignano

___ With Peter and Michael Newell at Ascot

Giorgio, Piero, Paolo, TASIS troopers, Bertha

Maria Cerbai of

Seifert and Robert

Capitignano

Wilson of Lugano, in Williamsburg

With Robert Morley and Malcolm Muggeridge at TASIS England

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Twenty years later, guardian angels Giorgio, Paolo, Maria,

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Piero Cerbai with Adrien and Anna at Capitignano

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Sui Generis It is quite a long rime since I fìrst set eyes upon other people—seventy-six years in fact. During that time, in politics, in intemational diplomacy and in a private life thoroughly enjoyed in many countries, I have had to do with at least as many men and women as most of us, and perhaps more. Yet now that I think about it in thè privacy of my study, I cannot recali anybody like Cris. In fact I cannot remember anybody who even remotely resembled her. It is not that she is unique— we are all of us unique in a greater or lesser degree. She is what those who like Latin quotes cali “sui generis,” a species all to herself. Cris confounds thè observation of thè late Lord Ponsonby—or was it Maurice Baring?— when he wrote about our troubled race:— If all thè good were clever, And all thè clever were good, The world would be so much better, Than we thought it possibly could: But—thè good are so harsh to thè clever: And thè clever so rude to thè good. Sadly, here lies a grain of truth. But all her friends know that Cris is good, yet I cannot recali that she was ever harsh to anybody. And she must certainly be clever—just look at her achievement: thè Hilton of Educational Establishments.

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Yet I cannot recali that she was ever rude to anybody, either, and nor I imagine can you. Our world needs a little help just now: more than a little. If one day it should turn out to be even slightly better than we thought it possibly could, then let it be remembered that Cris was there. Sir Peter Smithers Vico Morcote, Switzerland

Little Mother Here we are—God willing—to rejoice at one more famous milestone, at one more thunderous decade, marked as usuai with a barrage of Christopher threatening to do thè unpardonable —splash water on MCF’s hair

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sickening reverses and yet rounded off with a full complement of even greater accomplishments. I must have been shamefully drunk at thè also famous 70th birthday party to have presumed to steal thè fìrst waltz with our hostess. No one could do her a more painful or less exhilarating honour and I promise not to do it again this year. I shall stand at thè back, maybe behind thè orchestra, with tears of happiness and gratitude in my eyes just to have known thè woman who has always been, to me, “Little Mother”. It is true that she is inexhaustible, that she is thè most generous of friends, that she is most deserving of our admiration and our love in equal measure, and that I thank my stars that I never worked for her. But what I cherish most in her is that she has carried into thè end of this century (and into thè lives of all her friends and thè countless young who have been privileged


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to be her larger family) a living, enduring example of a standard of behaviour which is tirelessly unselfish, which takes truth for granted, which is orderly, disciplined, which imposes a love of beauty on a sometimes ugly world, which unflinchingly accepts its responsibility. It is possible to see this accumulation of virtue as American, somewhat as a Puritan legacy. Neverthe-less it is apt that we dance (or sing or hide behind thè string section) in her honour in Europe. America is now only her market. Europe

is her proper playground and thè scene of all her recent triumphs. So... a million happy birthday wishes and only one regret: that I could not write this message in my own illegible hand since there are so many things that need, cry out to be said which should remain illegible. From thè more legible and equally adoring Koukla and thè ever-adoring Christopher. Christopher MacLehose Publisher, London

Christopher MacLehose stealing affection from MCF’s true love—Saxon

Beauty and Duty As I have known Mrs. Fleming well for nearly twenty years, during which time a lot of my own life has been lived in her presence, ambiance, or immediate environs, it would be impossible—or impossibly lengthy—to cali to mind or put on paper any adequate sense of thè passionate tissue or, better, thè blood and thè bone, of life that we have shared. It has encompassed joy and sorrow, pain and pleasure, gaiety and gloom. But mostly joy. Although 1 teach literature, I fìnd most modem novels pallid, somehow “sicklied o’er with thè pale cast of thought” and lacking vitality, but also lacking nobility. Part of thè reason for this reaction is, I think, thè influence on me of two larger-than-life individuata: my father and my mother-in-law. However great their differences, their lives have some common qualities and characteristics. Both were great travellers and fine linguists, both deeply cultured, both Europeans and Americans at thè same time. Compared to their energetic exertions and extraordinary odysseys, many modern lives—and many modern novels—seem precious, introverted, neurotic, and ignoble affairs. Although thè phrase “joie de vivre” is French, I have never felt much of it in thè French; but I always felt it in my father, and I have always felt it in Mrs. Fleming. And in neither case was it thè product of a willed “desperate gaiety” in thè face of an allegedly absurd world, against which “living well is thè best revenge.” However much credit Mrs. Fleming deserves—and it is a lot—for her own joyfulness and delightful effect on so many people’s lives, I suspect she owes some of it to her own father, by all accounts a noble and remarkable man, who obviously passed on to her, at thè least, some very energetic genes.

But it is not a biological but a cultural inheritance that I am getting at here. From her father and mother I think Mrs. Fleming inherited what are sometimes called “Victorian” values—eamestness, hard work, noblesse oblige, unostentatious piety—without thè humorlessness that sometimes vitiated them. I believe W.H. Auden pointed out that “beauty” and “duty” comprise an important rhyme in Gilbert and Sullivan’s operettas; if true, this is very Victorian (in thè sense of pre-modem and even anti-modern) and very MCF. There may be “beauty” of various kinds in Yeats, Joyce, Pound and Hemingway, but “duty” is dead or ironie. Not so for MCF, who is a living soul in a moral universe, not a dead soul in an absurd one. Which is not to say that she is heavy or humorless, or any more virtuous than she has to be. Despite her own claim, she is no virgin, and sainthood is probably a bit much to hope for even when a generously non-sectarian meaning of that status is conceived. But her well-spring is some organic rapport between beauty and duty, between joy and work, bet­ ween happiness and virtue. “Forgive what you do not approve,” Blake wrote of himself, “and commend me for thè energetic exertion of my talent.” Mrs. Fleming likewise. She has not hidden her talent under a bushel, nor buried it in a field, nor been parsimonious in sharing it and its fruits. Just as it would be churlishly inappropriate to criticize her in this reminiscence, so would it be dishonest to suggest that I have always agreed—or do now agree—with all of her beliefs and valuations. But that she has a nobility at least partly Christian—earnest, humorous, and generous in her own inimitable wav—is, I think, indisputable. The way that it has always most touched and

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Michael visiting Cluny with Mrs. Fleming and Gai

impresseci me over thè two decades of our in­ timate familial rapport is in her treatment of ‘staff or ‘help.’ A naturai as well as a cultural aristocrat, Mrs. Fleming has always lived noblesse oblige. With occasionai and inevitable aberrations, she is no snob, but has always, to my knowledge, treated every person as a person, not an object, as an end, not merely a means, as a soul, not merely a body. She has thè most generous and beautiful manners of anyone,

other than her own two daughters and Paul Zazzaro, whom I have ever met. There is an apposite passage in one of thè profoundest modern books I have ever read, thè great Cam­ bridge historian Sir Herbert Butterfield’s Christianity and History, written in 1949. “The truth is,” Butterfield wrote, “that if men were good enough neither thè ancient city-state, nor thè medieval order of things nor modern nationalism would collapse. Neither humanism, nor liberalism nor democracy would be faced with intellectual bankruptcy.” The French Revolution carne about, said Carlyle, following Burke, “because too many men ceased doing their duty.” In our age many people no longer even believe thè word ‘duty’ has stable content. But Mrs. Fleming’s parents, and Basii and Richard Blackwell, and Dana Cotton, and my father, and Mrs. Fleming herself, all held fast to thè idea of ‘duty’ as thè soul’s proper form, as its homage, however mysterious, to its Creator. I hope she will cling to it stili, usque ad finem. Yet what has always made her dutifulness so engaging is her humor, her emotional generosity. No snob, no aesthete, no fastidious or selfdramatizing egotist, she has had too much humanity and too much of thè milk of human kindness in her to leave any one out of thè bundle of thè living, to leave any one out in thè cold. Life being “thè vale of soul-making,” she has voyaged far into this valley, beyond thè sight of mere mortals to chart, or ultimately to judge. Michael D. Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia Former English teacher, TASIS

Wisdom and Energy Akbar with his son, Tom

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---- tight thè areas of our world that are ‘capovoltato-ed,’ never stoop to be a ‘menefreghista,’ and charge yourself with a personal responsibility to bring about a ‘rinascimento’ of thè human spirit wherever your presence can contribute to its rebirth.” These words mean a lot more to me than they may to a casual reader, because I know that thè author lives by them. Mrs. Fleming has influenced hundreds if not thousands of people and I am sure will continue to do so. During thè past twenty-two years I have admired and adored her as an educator and as a


T R I B U T E S caring human being. She is simply great. One aspect of her personality that has im­ presseci me most is her energy. Defying entropy, her energy has constantly increased as thè years have gone by. There is no need to search for thè fountain of eternai youth. Who wants to remain young forever when one can age in Mrs. Fleming’s style, with all thè

wisdom in thè world and all thè energy to brighten thè life of anyone who Comes within her sphere of influence. Akbar A. Khan TASIS England, Thorpe Head of Math Department Director of TASIS Summer Language Program

The Pleasures of Table ^C^hen word gets out that Mrs. Fleming’s coming to town, or when a coveted invitation to Capitignano arrives, my heart gives a leap. Diets are joyously abandoned, whole grain loaves wantonly cast aside: all is in readiness. For I shall always associate Mrs. Fleming with thè pleasures of table, no less of conversation than of thè palate. She has presided at thè most memorable gatherings in my experience, and I am one of thè many who will be always grateful to her for an introduction to thè delights of winter picnics. The generous hospitality of thè lady is wellknown on several continents, and in fact, if she has a failing (a point yet to be verifìed empirically one way or thè other), it is that she likes to tempt thè weak to an increase in girth. This is, however, but a small price to pay for thè pleasure of her company, and any way, none from among thè legions of her guests has ever, to my knowledge, actually burst.

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Grand banquet from thè early days—stili in style

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T R I B U T E S

Mrs. Fleming dines with “Henry Vili”

Mrs. Fleming with

SONNET FROM THE DINNER TABLE How does she feed me? Let me count thè ways. She feeds me to thè depth and breadth and height My piate can hold; till, feeling not quite right, I must needs leave my chair, and loose my stays. She feeds me to thè level of everyday’s Most glutt’nous lust, by sun and candlelight. In Tuscan hills or Phene Street, thè selfsame fìght Against thè scales, against thè siren calories. She plies me with thè pasta she can use —Famed metabolic fleetness: for her ’tis fine— With salmon, sweetmeats, dainty tiramisus, ice cream, fois gras, cocktails, bourbon, wine: The grandest hours of all my life!—and pounds to lose or no, I do professi There is on earth no better way to dine!

Melissa (in front and stili slim) and (from front to back) Mark Aeschliman, Maria Clara Zazzaro, Adrien, Simone, and Anna Aeschliman, and Paul Zazzaro

Elizabeth Barrette Browning and Melissa Maier (Zazzaro) Magliaso, Switzerland Former ESL teacher, TASIS

MAGNANIMITÀ for Mrs. Fleming Aristotle recommends magnanimity, being great-souled, The generosity of intentimi and effect to which we should aspire, And some Romans teli us that manners are minor morals,

174

An idea more honored in breach than in observance, A vision more believed in than truly seen in action— With few exceptions, and this lady is one: her manners


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Generous, always directed to thè end that people should Touch and greet, that social distance should diminish, not increase; Hers never thè manner pretentious, cool and self-enamored, The haughty word, thè unkind eyebrow raised or accent spoken; Her manners are never a knife to distance, a sword to divide. She revives thè standard and polishes anew thè tarnished type,

And it was this exalted sense that thè Apostle meant When he said, “give proof to all of your courtesy.” This thè lady always has done, and always will do: Her manner and grace do charity always renew. Michael D. Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia (written in 1980)

Tò Cris: You Have Made a DIFFERENCE JDana and all thè Cottons and Christoffersens wish you a spectacular Birthday! We are so proud to know you, and we know that you in turn have ampie reason for being proud of what you have created in international education. You have dreamed dreams that others did not, and you have managed through your abundant creativity, perseverance and energy to make your dreams come true. TASIS is a magnificent testimony to these dreams and to their realization. All three Christoffersen boys: Erik, Nils, and Leif, have been lucky to experience thè fruits of your creation at TASIS England, and all of them have come back richer in ideas, knowledge and respect for other cultures and for other people. On this special day we salute you not only as

a friend but for all your meaningful achievements for young people over half a century. You have made a DIFFERENCE. Dana would love to be able to participate in this celebration. As you know, he loves a good party! He greatly admires you and always has a sparkle in his eye when he describes thè numerous occasions when he worked with you and when he and Gerry played with you. He has great respect and love for thè fine human being that you are. So do all of us! Much, much love from us all, Becky Cotton Christoffersen Alexandria, Virginia Alumni parent, TASIS England Summer School

Becky and Cris in Oslo

Old friends Chandler Bigelow, Gerry Cotton, Madeline Chapman, and Dana Cotton

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Father Leif and son Nils Christoffersen host a reunion with Cris Fleming

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T R I B U T E S

AL—. ^ *>st

£tV TOAST" TO OUFL GIRL CJFUS

I sìnccrdti believc ihat cada honcst caiìirg Each malte. of Ufe has Its orna elite Its ounx. aristocractE Based upova eXcellence of performance.

CrLs7 t|ou are an aristocrat yòu. are a. dear friericL co mmcuodlrag* our respccizr’ and our love.

Dana Cotton (center), guest speaker at Graduation in Villa Negroni in early 1960

Maggie Cotton enjoys one of Dana’s many wondertul jokes at Capitignano

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Dana Cotton, Evanston, Illinois (written in 1980)

Another of My Mother’s Signatures, ... besides her ice bucket, is her famous black beauty case. It is her travelling home; it is never unpacked and travels with her everywhere. As she says, like her enormous black handbags, she can crawl in and out and bring out treatment for anything that ails you, including snake bites! Helena Rubenstein, her dose friend for over 60 years, over-sized theatrical jewelry, antique crystal bottles and silver boxes also all magically fìt into this case that’s no larger than a shoe box. And

woe to thè person who has to travel with her if it ever gets stolen, as I did once across America after it was surreptitiously removed from her feet at Heathrow Airport. What a surprise and haul for thè thief and what a treasure trove its replacement is for a granddaughter. Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia

A Visit from Nonna Nonna carne to visit us Which was so nice of her I’m glad she brought her makeup kit

176

Cause I like looking into it She brought me lots of beautiful books Because I like reading in nice snug nooks.


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Daniella Case and

We rode in a jeepney to lake Taal I’m glad we didn’t even fall. She slept late while we woke early But that wasn’t anything We had fun in thè tricycles But we didn’t ride any bicycles.

manna Gai in thè Philippines

There was a blackout But we didn’t pout She bought me crayons and paints and I drew her a picture. Nonna is very kind I love you Nonna Daniella Case Metro Manila, Philippines

Another Granddaughter’s View Learning

how to mix

BOURBON OLD FASHIONEDS AT THE AGE OF SEVEN.... Nonna (while getting ready for dinner): Anna, could you make a bourbon old fashioned? Anna: But Nonna, I don’t know how to. Nonna: All right, put thè ice in, a lot please. Then put in a teaspoon of sugar, a few drops of bitters to melt it down, then pour some bour­ bon, enough to fili thè glass a third of thè way full. Fili thè rest of thè glass up with water, last but not least, put a slice of orange in. Anna: Okay. A few minutes later. Anna: Is this all right, Nonna? Nonna: Let me taste. (Smacks lips.) Just perfect. Thank you, dear. GOING TO BORGO WITH NONNA Whenever thè Queen goes “downtown” she has to dress up and look her best. “May I go with you, Nonna?” “Sure. Have you brushed your hair? Wear a nice dress. We must always look our best.” Going on a drive with Nonna is like riding in a piane with thè feeling you are in thè air. She drives through Borgo like a hurricane and beeps at anyone who’s moving slowly! In thè U.S. she would be known as “The Reckless Educator.” We hurried through our errands so fast I was back home in thè pool before I knew it. Nonna has to have her hair done at least once a week. I like to go with her because you can see her with three different hairstyles. She

normally asks me if I want a haircut, hairwash, or once even a perm. It normally takes a whole moming to get her hair done. [Editor’s Note. Credit should be given where credit is due. “Nonna” could not Ève without Elena in Sagginale, rustie farmers’ wives’ hair salon setting that it is, and Mariucia in Lugano, who comes to La Signora’s bedroom at any hour, day or night. Let’s keep our priorities straight. One of thè times when “Nonna” broke her wrist, she insisted on getting her hair done before going to thè locai vet in Borgo to have thè wrist set. Needless to say it had to be broken and reset later.]

Grandchildren Daniella, Adrien and Anna wondering what Nonna is up to next

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T R I B U T E S

«N i Grandma with grandson Alee Fleming

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.. .and with Adrien and Anna Aeschliman

BREAKFAST IN BED “Hi, Nonna. Has Maria made breakfast?” “No.” “Okay! ITI make it then. Do you want raisin bread or soya bread?” “Raisin, please.” Things that MUST be on her large white tray are her siiver saccharine bottle and siiver tea pot. She always has a grapefruit, but eats it last so “thè toast doesn’t get cold.” The phone rings. She answers it and speaks to three different people in three different languages. We have fun looking at magazines and chatting, snuggled up in bed together. It’s always exciting to eat breakfast in bed with Nonna. Why don’t you try it? After breakfast we always do “exercises.” It’s always fun because it’s not very strenuous. Whatever you do with thè educator, mother, reckless driver, or grandmother, it’s an experience! I love you Nonna. You’re WONDERFUL—80 or 180. Anna Crist Aeschliman Free Union, Virginia

Anna in Nonna’s arms

Remarkable Mother that She Is

On a wonderful holiday in Greece with mother and Tom

178

xeople are usually perplexed when they ask my mother how many children she has and her answer is “thousands.” I know what she means, and thè questioner quickly comes to realize it too, since I know thè amazing commitment she has and thè tremendous responsibility she feels towards all thè young people who come to TASIS. And yet I never felt short-changed as her daughter. As much as we chuckled when dear friend Dana Cotton once said, “Cris, I want your undivided attention” and she quipped, “Dana dear, I never give any one my undivided attention,” she is

amazingly focused and attentive to all—to thè one, twenty or hundreds in her presence. As one of her three children, I can look back and say she was always there and very much there as mother and father. Being a parent now myself, blessed with a wonderful, supportive husband, I can imagine thè reai challenges and diffìculties of a single parent, and yet my mother gave us so much more than two or even four parents could give. I am grateful for her yanking us out of thè Philadelphia “Main Line” country-club milieu, for her daring to do something different with her family. She supported us in a remarkable way, always surrounding us with beauty, whether our home was a converted garage, a green house or a tool shed, and she worked hard to do this, yet always seemed to enjoy it. Along with thè discipline and high expectations placed on us, she always brought humour and fun. My memory is filled with happy “spots of time,” wonderful family holidays and trips, endless picnics in memorable settings, or “getting away from it all” in thè early days of thè school by heading into thè middle of Lake Lugano surrounded by thè beautiful mountains,


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cutting off thè engine of our little motor boat and just sitting there, mother and I, quietly reading or basking in thè sun. Mother has practiced what she believes: “It’s not what you do for your children, but with your children that matters.” Along with thè tremendous opportunities she gave us as we were growing up, she also always trusted us with responsibilities from very early on. She expected, we delivered. Many of her “other” children were stretched and grew in this same way. I am grateful.

As an adult with thè challenges and delights of parenthood and adulthood and an everincreasing awareness and distress at thè environing mediocrity, I am ever more grateful to my mother for thè high standards she has always fought for and lived by, far thè extraordinary upbringing she gave us, and for thè remarkable mother that she is. Her daughter, Lynn Free Union, Virginia

Endless delightful picnics—here with Gai, mother, and Michael

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Mother and daughter,

fresco”—here with

Lynn

family in France

Baptism of Adrien Aeschliman, in my arms in grandma’s baptismal gown, with Michael and Anna, mother, Gai, Mark and Daniella Case

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T R I B U T E S

To My Dear Mother,

One of those many kisses

Mother shares congratulations with

You read thè reminiscences of relatives and friends in this hook. The accounts are amusing, serious, poignant, bringing to remembrance situations long forgotten. Your eldest daughter has forgotten more than she remembers of her early life, perhaps some lapse of memory has been intentional. Certainly many circumstances and events do not deserve being recalled, as they would edify no one. These present comments are more heart reflections than specific reminiscences, gHmpses of heart remembrances and reflections on thè hope for thè time ahead of you. Except for thè interlude at thè Catholic school in Aix-en-Provence, I never recali your being too far away when I needed you. You were always, and sdii are, available to me. Your care and nurture shone then and shines stili. I am grateful to you. As I grew older and sought my social independence, you had thè wisdom to permit me enough rein to allow me to mature, but not so much that I would fall into folly. I am grateful to you. You encouraged me as I worked for TASIS,

even if someone else may have been a better representative. I am grateful to you. After leaving New York City, my life changed significantly for thè better. You are supportive of my marriage to Mark and that new horizon that opened for my future. I am grateful to you. Almost a decade ago I yielded my heart and my life to thè Lordship of Jesus Christ. It was my decision to take myself off thè throne of my life and to invite Jesus to take His rightful place there. My hope and prayer is that you will also invite Jesus to become Lord of your life. It is He, through thè Holy Spirit, who provides thè nurture of our spiritual being, gives us thè wisdom to make Godly decisions along life’s path and encourages us in faith and truth. When we meet life’s adversities, Jesus carries us through as we rely on His strength and power. He loves you without any condidon. I love you, too, and am thankfìil to share this eightieth birthday celebration with you. Your daughter, Cai Kamarin, Metro Manila Philippines

daughter Gai

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... and shares some moments of relaxation after thè party With husband Mark

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Proud mother and daughter

Mother ventures out to thè Philippines for a visit

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T R I B U T E S

In Conclusion

Nothing great IS ACCOMPLISHED WITHOUT PASSION. WE OWE EVERYTHING TO ENTHUSIASTIC PEOPLE. Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy (A quotation that someone thought quite descriptive ofM.C.F.)

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Josephine Baker’s step-son once said about her, “She was like thè sun. We need thè sun for thè flowers to grow, for thè birds to sing, but if you come too dose, you can get burned__ ” I can well sympathize with this reaction, since my mother is also an energizer and a devourer. She could not be thè personality she is and have accomplished what she has without being a forceful dynamo and a dominating presence in one’s life, one that can devour if one does not have enough sense to keep a healthy and respectful distance. The breadth of thè Atlantic Ocean and time apart allowed me a helpful perspective on my mother, which in turn freed me to work on this book about her life. When I set out to try to capture in words thè character that is my mother, thè project seemed rather daunting, and as I got into it even more so, but “fools rush in” and one of thè many things my mother has taught me is to take on challenges and see them through to thè end: “always finish what you start.” So there was no turning back once I had embarked on this pro­ ject. And yet I found thè challenge of trying to put my mother, Mary Crist Fleming, between two covers, even if fleetingly, was well worth thè struggle, time, and effort. I also realized we couldn’t hold her here for long. Since I have known her (44 years), she has always made time live, whether it is a daily meal, a picnic, a birthday, a holiday, a wedding, a baptism, a trip—short or long, time together, small or large event; she has made moments of time occasions, thè passage of time memorable. I hope thè gift of this book and thè festivities planned make thè eightieth birthday of an extraordinary lady memorable. Good photographs are a delight to thè eye and they often succeed in catching “spots of time,” precious moments in life that are so fleeting, and different aspects and moods of people. And yet, similar to thè way that, even

with all their advances, Science and technology cannot finally get a handle on life in its totality and on thè essence of being, such as thè most important aspects of existence for each of us, photographs stop and catch an instant in time, but do not give thè complete picture or thè feeling of life, thè vitality, thè personality of a human being.

When such a personality as my mother approaches her ninth decade I felt compelled to try to catch in one volume thè essence of Mary Crist Fleming and what her life has meant to so many, to pay her tribute by collecting dif­ ferent aspects of her life and personality from her many friends and associates. Of course nothing absolutely or completely catches thè miracle of being that is a person, by thè very nature of selection and available material, but my hope is that thè words here contained have come closer to making up as complete a picture as possible—at capturing thè essence of being that is MCF. I hope I, with thè wonderful help of all thè contributors, have succeeded in this mission. Just as a crystal is many sided and reflects back different light and colors, so too is a personality such as MCF multi-faceted. None of us are only one thing to all people, but each of us presents so many different facets to our fellow travellers in this life. Not least of all Mary Crist Fleming has been so many different things to so many different people—daughter, wife, lover, mother, comforter, mentor, inspirer, dreamer, and through it all educator. In all these roles she has been tremendously committed and enthusiastic, giving of her best. To all she undertakes and meets she brings a zest for life, a joie de vivre, that is a reai inspiration. May God continue to bless her always. With love and devotion, Lynn


Frances Leavitt Crist’s Prayer Our Father, as we come to thè parting, we humbly give Thee thanks for thè days of our gathering. We thank Thee for thè reai work accomplished, for thè friendships made, for inspiration for future work, and we beseech Thee to set Thy seal upon what we have done and make it strong and beautiful. We thank Thee for thè quickening of old friendships, for new and fruitful contacts, and for thè broadened understanding of our common work. We pray Thee for fresh devotion to thè great aims and possibilities of our lives, for unfeigned love for our fellow-workers, and for a deep longing to save and ennoble those whose lives we touch. Make us worthy to bear Thy Message. And now, as we turn our faces forward toward thè toil and care, thè trials and temptations of our work, we feel our need of Thee, Thou great companion of our souls. Be Thou thè strength of our weakness, thè wisdom of our foolishness, thè triumph of our failures, thè changeless unity in our changing days. Knowing thè brevity of our years, help us to work resolutely while it is day. Shine upon us, Thou sun of our life, even in thè valley of thè shadow, and may thè song of faith never die in our hearts. We make our petition to thè almighty and most merciful God, creator and sustainer of thè physical and moral universe, whose love and justice know no bounds and extend to all nations and races. Amen. [Prayer said for over seventy years at each June’s Graduation Exercises, first by Frances Leavitt Crist at thè Mary Lyon School, and then by her daughter, Mary Crist Fleming, at TASIS and TASIS England.]

And now, brethren, ... all that rings true, all that commands reverence, and all that makes for right; all that is pure, all that is lovely, all that is gracious in thè telling; virtue and merit, wherever virtue and merit are found—let this be thè argument of your thoughts. St. Paul, Philippians 4:8 (Ronald Knox, tr.)


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ADDENDUM 2000 Table of Contents THE 1990s Burgundian Fète John Bailey Olivia Rasini Mrs. Fleming Corrado Agusta Richard Jensen Muhlhofer Family David Mayernik Marina Rasini Tom Fleming Bill Eichner Marianna Vrahimi Mrs. Fleming Marco Hauert Christopher Frost Ken Blessing Lyle Rigg Dennis Manning Fernando Gonzalez Betsy Newell David and Judy Kovacs Christopher MacLehose Koukla MacLehose Lotti Turner Gerhard Schwarzacher Sir Peter Smithers Sarah Di Lenardo Nigel Blackwell Mimi Quadri John and Michele Watson Nicla Mambretti Jack Rich Hixon Glore Images from thè ‘30s John Watts Rick McGrath Ray Robbins Some of Her Favorites Anna Aeschliman Daniella Case Adrien Aeschliman Emma Christine Lynn Fleming Aeschliman

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Doctor of Humane Letters What ‘TASIS’ Really Means Addresses Her Alumni What Is Success? I Have Attended Many Schools in My Life TASIS Family of thè Decade Champion of Beauty Her Sense of Humor The Grit of thè Entrepreneur MCF’s Completely Divided Attention She Was Dynamite.... Effective and Strong! Speaks to thè Last Class of thè 20th Century Authority Is Something You Take Leading by Example Your Thread Has Encircled thè Globe Great Good Fortune The Best Teacher We Have Ever Had When Style Becomes Class Has Anything Changed in thè Last Ten Years? A Fateful Meeting or A Friendship to Cherish What Blessings She Has Poured Upon Their Lives My Most Serious Competitor My Legs Are Stili Good Looking The Lady Who Changed My Life That Formidable Machine The Two Great Hugs of My Life Dearest Cris — It Has Been Ever Thus! La Guapa Mrs. Fleming Revisiting Old Haunts In Her I Have Always Trusted I Have Never Been So Upstaged in My Life You Told Me You Were a Survivor I Was Hooked Ad Multos Annos Mentor and Role Model The Role You Have Played in My Life The Birthday Girl Herself She Never Puts Up With Second Best To Eliminate Chaos Addresses thè Alumni

186 187 188 188 191 192 192 193 193 194 194 195 196 198 201 202 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 208 209 209 210 211 211 212 212 213 213 214 215 215 215 216 217 217 218 218 219


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Headmasters George Salimbene and Lyle Rigg, with Master Teachers Akbar Khan and Max Page serenade Mrs. Fleming

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Doctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa Citation MARY CRIST FLEMING, as thè proud bearer of a family tradition in education extending over most of thè past century, you have not only made a valuable contribution to your own coun­ try but have also distinguished yourself as a leading figure in international education in various parts of Europe, not least of which is Greece. Your long career in education began in 1933, when upon graduation from Radcliffe College you assumed thè post of Assistant Director at thè Mary Lyon School, founded by your parents at Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Eleven years later, you took a step in a new direction when you founded your own school in Landsdale, Pennsylvania, an institution which you continued to direct until 1955. Important though this work was in thè development of your career, it had become increasingly clear that thè stage which it provided was much too limited for thè full expression of your reai talents and vision as an educator. Your greatest contribution was yet to come, and it was to be in thè field of international education. It was thus that in 1955 you founded thè first of a number of schools and programs in Europe which were to bear thè imprint of your clear insight into thè character and nature of thè overseas international school. This, of course, was The American School in Switzerland, later to become known as TASIS. Its remarkable success led in due course to thè founding of, among others, TASIS England American School in

Cris Fleming celebrating her 80,h with Jack Bailey

Mrs. Fleming listens

1976, TASIS Hellenic International School in i j nr* a ctc t * teli ly/y, and lAoio Cyprus International ochool in 1983. Through these schools you have served students from a wide variety of backgrounds. One of your greatest contributions, however, has been thè provision of a rich and valuable educa­ tional experience for thè children of American families living and working overseas. From your life’s work, to which you have shown such dedication, it is manifest that cen­ trai to your educational philosophy lies a faith in thè value of intercultural exchanges and in thè power of education to foster international understanding. Moreover, such has been thè strength of your convictions and thè power of your example that you have to a remarkable degree imbued those about you with thè same high sense of mission that has informed your work. And so, MARY CRIST FLEMING, by virtue of thè authority vested in me by thè Trustees of The American College of Greece, I confer upon you thè degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa, admitting you to all thè rights, privileges, dignities and immunities pertaining hereunto. In witness thereof, I invest you with this hood and present you with this diploma.

as President Bailey reads th© Citation

John S. Bailey, President The American College of Athens Athens, Greece, June 22, 1990

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What ‘TASIS’ Really Means ÌMany schools have acronyms as names, but none of them sound quite as harmonious as ‘TASIS’. When I fìrst carne to this school four years ago, it took me about thè fìrst two months to figure out what thè word ‘TASIS’ stands for. There are all kinds of things I thought of. For instance, ‘Talentful And Sagaciously Inclined Students’. After all, TASIS does host a variety of talented students in thè arts, music, drama, academic studies, and thè most diverse things. I also thought of ‘Transcendingly Anticlinal Souls Internationally Sesquipedalian’. TASIS actually is made up of individuai that are very anticlinal, or leaning in different directions, who sometimes use long words. The community at this

school is so diverse in every way that people tend to lean in different directions; toward art or travel or social life. It is thè spirit of thè school that encourages individuality. As for thè long words, we use them just to confuse people. On thè other hand, TASIS could just mean ‘Travel And Ski In Switzerland’. Of course, we don’t only travel in Switzerland, but all over Europe and beyond. Through travel, we discover new horizons and explore new places and ideas. Ski term in Crans-Montana is one thing that unites all us Tasites. Even though some of us ski, some snowboard, and others break their bones, we’re all after common pleasures like drinking hot chocolate, eating a crepe, or having a snowball fìght. I hope new students look forward to joining this experience. Finally, a crowd of‘TASIS’ acronyms started invading my brain, and towering above them all was: ‘This All Sounds Incredibly Silly’.

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But at least now I know what ‘TASIS’ really means: ‘Truly A Sensationally Intense School’. TASIS is intense. It is intense with people, faces, voices, laughter. It is intense with unmatched experience, with discovery, with joy of living. But most of all, it is intense with thè spirit that Mrs. Fleming breathed into it when she fìrst created it. Thank you, Mrs. Fleming, for this unique experience, and may it continue for years to come. Olivia Rasini, 1996, Montagnola, Switzerland

Austin Kennedy and Olivia Rasini, TASIS ‘99, two artistic souls intentionally silly

Mrs. Fleming Addresses Her Alumni at thè Washington Reunion ^What a wonderful room full of people, of very special people. I don’t think Ambassador and Mrs. Defago suspected when they issued such a generous and gracious invitation to thè Embassy that I was such a prolifìc old lady or that many of my students would come to thè reception because they couldn’t believe I was stili alive! Or to see if I was stuffed with straw like El Cid, tied to a horse and sent into battle!

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Be that as it may, I want to extend very hearty thanks to thè Ambassador of thè country that has so warmly hosted TASIS for thè 45 years of its existence. Certainly thè beauty of our command post above thè Lake of Lugano has entered into thè souls and has even changed thè lives of hundreds of young people. May I take this occasion to express our deep gratitude to Switzerland through you, Ambassador and Mrs. Defago.


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When you’re living a long life you collect things that you like, even love. Some women have collected charms for their bracelets, reminiscent of events in their lives, others stock options, cats - one lovely old lady I know has fìve! - stamps — old coins. I have collected villas, chàteaux, English manor houses, and therefore mortgages. I’ve probably collected more mortgages than any woman you know. These, of course, because I had to have a place to house my most favorite collection - young people, young people from all over thè world. From 12 students in 1956, today 2,400 young people come through thè gates ofTASIS every year, representing fifty nations of thè world. An old lady’s dream come true! One of thè most rewarding aspects is to have my own three children - all here today - share my passion for education. Gai, through 10 years of missionary Service in thè Philippines and Indonesia, Tom as head of our Washington Office, and Lynn as Executive Director in Lugano, my successor in all thè myriad activities involved in thè daily running of a good school. They too believe TASIS to be unique. Strong academic preparation for US colleges is an obvious goal, but not thè reai mission of TASIS. We

Mrs. Fleming delivers her speech at thè

dare to hope that a TASIS experience means broadened horizons, an understanding of other cultures, friendship with many different human beings, and a commitment to make thè world a better place for all of us to live in.

TASIS Washington Reunion in March,

We have a common battle - and that is that as Americans we have it too good. We have a superiority complex. Yet we live in an almost decadent society - a hard one for parents and schools to fight. Stalin once said, “We’ll never have to fight America - all we need to do is destroy their young!” And way back to thè Roman poet Juvenal, who warned us, “Affluence is more ruthless than war.”

I. to r. Kate Gonzalez, Alumni Director, Lynn Fleming Aeschliman, Executive Director, Mrs. Fleming, Founder and Director Emerita, Swiss Ambassador Alfred Defago

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Mrs. Fleming surrounded by TASIS alumni at thè Washington Reunion

As I look with great fondness into thè sea of faces I see here this evening, I’m thrilled to see some that go back 35 to 40 years! Linda Avery 75. Thanks Linda for arranging this fine eventi Fort Barett, 73, TASIS summer ’59 and ‘64, thè Burkerts’, ’69 and 72, Ned Lynch, ’66, who turned down a black tie dinner at Franklin to be here tonight. Petra Pringle, ’69, John Pritzlaff 72, Alan Robinson 71 and 75, Martin de Bruin 70, Cari Wolk, all thè way from California! And even some of our old and fine faculty: Jay Devine, Mac Ross, Bob Winer and most important of all, thè new Headmaster of TASIS England, Dennis Manning, - a splendid headmaster he is and TASIS so fortunate to have him. Chris Frost, headmaster of Lugano, is sea kayaking with 8 students in Sardinia during InPro Travel! Now you are parents of this generation and as concerned as we are at TASIS about drugs, promiscuity, Aids, and boredom - a generation of young people with nothing to struggle against — only poverty, religious massacres, starvation, civil wars, but all too far away to touch usi! Boredom - “Entertain usi” as Kurt Cobain said! When there’s so much that needs to be done in thè world. TASIS last year’s Salutatorian, Austin Kennedy, put it so clearly, “We, as a generation, lack motivation and conviction - we have it so easy. We haven’t lived through apocalyptic wars. Weapons of mass destruction and genocide were born before us

190

and thus do not shock us — we’ve had space within our reach and disease held at a safe distance. We were born into democracy and it seems to be working fine. We are safe, comfortable and bored!” And now our Salutatorian pays me, that is TASIS, thè greatest compliment I have ever received. “In entrusting your children to Mrs. Fleming, you have given them into an environment which nurtures, in every case that I have seen, thè process of self-discovery and finding what it is that one loves. If I resembled a Kurt Cobain when I arrived here, I am coming away with a newfound sense of beauty, a passion for life, and an awareness of thè amazing value of every individuai person and I thank you for that. To thè Class of 1999: Here’s to fìnding your love.” That is thè finest tribute I have ever received and is an inspiration and a challenge for all of us to make TASIS, your alma mater, an even stronger training ground for our young, training them to be capable of true leadership, of defending and preserving thè fìnest in our western civilization. Thank you, very dear alumni, for being here today and for your ongoing support and devotion to TASIS and its goals. Delivered at thè Swiss Embassy in Washington, D.C., on March 4th, 2000.


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What Is Success? 1 he other day, while sitting next to Mrs. Fleming by thè fìre at her house after thè play, I realized, and confessed, how much I have changed at TASIS. I think my changes aren’t directly due to thè program or thè rules, but more to thè people I have met in these three years and to thè values they have transmitted. To illustrate these changes, I would like to use an Emerson quotation I carne across in one of my classes this year. What is success? To laugh often and much; To win thè respect of intelligent people and affection of children; To earn thè appreciation of honest critics and endure thè betrayal of false friends; To appreciate beauty; To fmd thè best in others; To leave thè world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition; To know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived; This is to have succeeded. Ralph W. Emerson *

If you didn’t know me three years ago, there are a few things you have to know in order to understand my point. I was lazy, pessimistic, aggressive, and narrow minded. Despite thè fact that I have changed, I am stili not a saint, but if a teacher had handed me this quotation two years ago on a quiz I would have thought he was a freak trying to make class interesting. I would have just looked at it and wondered who this teacher thought he was! He must want us to lose time. He must want us to get a bad grade. Who is this Emerson anyway, and who does he think he is? Was he some kind of prophet or genius? He doesn’t know anything about suc­ cess. He probably doesn’t even know what suc­ cess is. At thè time, Al Pacino defìned success for me with his line from thè movie Scarface: “If you have thè money, you have thè power. If you have thè power, you have thè women.” Now that’s success!

this year, I had developed a new perspective: “This Emerson may know what he’s saying. He may be right about success.” I realized through this passage that success is a lot more than getting into thè best college, getting thè best job, and making thè most money. I realized that simple things are what give us thè biggest boosts in life. It can either be a smile, a beautiful sunset or an honest thanks, but that’s what keeps us all going. Looking at this quotation today, I feel successful and it should make everyone in this room feel successful. As Mrs. Fleming told us, she is thè richest person in thè world because of us. And that’s because she fully understands Emerson’s concept of success and tries to transmit it to us every day of her life. And tonight I want to make clear that we are thè richest students thanks to her and to this wonderful international experience that we have lived. Corrado Agusta TASIS 2000 Senior Banquet *Editor’s note: This is one of Mrs. Fleming’s favorite quotations.

Senior Corrado with Mrs. Fleming

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Or at least that’s what I thought success was. In life, sometimes people are just not ready for certain concepts. But when I got this quotation

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I Have Attended Many Schools in My Life I have attended many schools in my life, in Los Angeles, Connecticut, England, France, and, of course, Switzerland. Most people fìnd their years at college to be their most memorable. For me there is no question that I learned more and grew more at TASIS than at any other institution. At TASIS I discovered thè classical guitar and classical music in generai. This led to a Ph.D. in music history and a career as a university professor. At TASIS I discovered thè joy of travel. At TASIS I discovered thè joy of speaking foreign languages and exploring foreign cultures. At TASIS I discovered thè great outdoors and thè joy of hiking. At TASIS I discov­ ered thè joy of learning. But most importantly,

at TASIS I discovered thè joy of dose friendships. Thank you, Mrs. Fleming, for having thè courage to start this incredible school, as well as thè other institutions with TASIS in their names. It is amazing to think how many lives you’ve changed in such a positive way. So here’s to your ninetieth birthday and thank you for making my life so much more complete. Most sincerely yours, Richard d’Arcambal Jensen, TASIS ‘73

The TASIS Family of thè Decade Salute Mrs. Fleming Dear Mrs. Fleming, Thank you very much for making thè TASIS experience possible for us. You have enriched our lives with your belief in thè importance of beauty in a person’s youth. You have taught us so much through your visions and dreams. We

take this occasion to express our deepest gratitude to you, and to wish you all thè best. Happy Birthday! Mathias, Veronika, Tobias, andfamily Miihlhofer

Father Ferdinand, Tobias, TASIS ‘98Yale, Mother Irma, Mathias, TASIS ‘95University of Vienna, Veronika, TASIS '97Stanford

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Champion of Beauty TASIS has always had a reputation for “stretching” people, but I’d like to thank you on your 90th birthday for what you have done to make my job easier as a classical architect:

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Location, location, location: from thè beginning you have always sought out thè most beau­ tiful sites for your schools. History: those beautiful sites always carne with noble old buildings, which you lovingly cared for, restored and gave new life. Beauty: your bylaws for TASIS actually require thè schools to be in places of beauty, as a vital part of thè students’ formation.

TUE LAUTI

So, Mrs. Fleming, thanks for your courageous championing of beauty, which has enriched thè souls of generations of students, and given one architect all thè tools he could ever want.

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With fondest regards, David Mayernik Rome, Italy TASIS Master Planner, Architect and Painter

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Her Sense of Humor No one I’ve ever known embodies her ideal with such clarity and, best of all, such sense of humor. She made me laugh so many times; she truly surprises me with something “outrageous” and unexpected almost every time I see her.

hearts and in due time they’ll tap it to live bet­ ter. An authentic guru, so easy to love.... Marina Rasini Montagnola, Sivitzerland Mother of TASIS students Thea ‘02, Sophie ‘99, Olivia ‘99

What better way to educate children AND adults: thè unexpected moulds your curiosity and mental flexibility, makes you wide-eyed so that fewer things will escape your attention. Her sense of humor is what allows her to communicate her ideal to young people so well. She’s able to suggest to them ways to participate in life that they might never touch on otherwise. I know they’ll all carry this in their

The four vivacious Rasini ladies

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The Grit of thè Entrepreneur while I was in boarding school in thè late ‘50s when she had returned to thè U.S. to somehow come up with $20,000 that was critically necessary to avoid shutting thè school down. While I didn’t fully understand thè absolute dictates of cash flow at that time, I sure got a good sense of how criticai that $20,000 was. With thè help of some friends to loan her thè money she was able to survive that crisis. There were numerous other crises during those early years, many of which I never knew about, but all of which required thè same unrelenting determination to overcome.

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it takes thè perspective of twenty-fìve years of business and banking experience to appreciate Mother’s quite exceptional accomplishment in founding, leading thè development and, finally, assuring thè perpetuation of The TASIS Schools. Founding thè school was probably thè easiest part as schooling was really thè only endeavor she had any experience with and, at thè time, she wanted to live in Europe. Every young business hits some bumps in thè road if not thè occasionai stone wall as my years in banking taught me. It is thè ability to get over these hurdles that separates thè successfìil businesses from thè failures and that truly puts to thè test thè determination and grit of thè entrepre­ neur. I well remember a brief visit from mother

Today, The TASIS Schools are thè most recognized international secondary schools operating in multiple countries in Europe. While it took a bit of luck to get there, what it really took was Mother’s undeviating determination to make it happen. With thè creation of thè TASIS Foundation and thè donation of thè schools and all thè properties to thè Foundation, Mother has done her best to assure thè perpetuation of thè schools. Her son, Tom Fleming Director, TASIS US Office Washington, D.C.

Tom thè Navy Man

MCF s Completely Divided Attention I’H never forget visiting Mrs. Fleming on thè campus of Le Chàteau de Beauchamps in thè spring before we opened TASIS France. I had flown up from Cyprus for a weekend and Mrs. Fleming was arriving from Switzerland thè same day by car. We first met on thè highway when I spotted thè white Volvo pulled off thè road as I passed by in my rental. It was early evening, thè sun was low, a balmy breeze, in short: time to break out thè drinking kit. She rolled down her window to greet me: “What will it be, Bill, an old fashioned or gin and tonic?” Thus began a working weekend at thè Chàteau Beauchamps.

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With only months to go before greeting a fully enrolled summer program, thè place was bustling with activity. The sheep had just moved out of thè dependance, which had to be completely restored to house 40 boys. The place was swarming with workmen. There were stili teachers to hire, cooks and maids to hire, furniture to order; exactly thè kind of work MCF loves. A huge project, that challenges thè odds, that has her orchestrating thè efforts and talents of so many people. At thè end of a busy day I went to fetch Mrs. Fleming for dinner. She had taken one of thè bed-


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rooms in thè girls’ dorm as her headquarters while all this work was going on. It was 7:00 pm, and she was stili working when I entered. Her desk was set up to face thè window that commanded a view of thè whole campus - she had to keep an eye on everything. She was on thè phone to thè furniture maker in Verona, I recali. This is thè man who made thè beautiful double-sided desks for thè student rooms, which can stili be seen on thè Lugano campus. Once again, no doubt, Mrs. Fleming was changing thè specifications for these desks. Standing in front of her was Pascal - he was thè grounds keeper, and he was making his report on thè day’s progress and tak-

Bill and Melissa Eichner in thè early years

ing orders for thè next morning. I recali her pointing out thè window, asking Pascal why thè workmen were on their way home so early! These two simultaneous conversations, one in French, thè other in Italian, did not prevent her from querying me about our dinner plans, now in English. Also at her side, attentive and cairn, was Saxon, one of thè first in that great line of beautiful German Shepherds which have always kept her company. Saxon shared a knowing glance with thè rest of us men in thè room, as we each stood and waited for thè completely divided attention of MCE

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Mrs. Fleming, thè Chàtelaine of Beauchamp

She was Dynamite... Effective and Strong GrEETINGS FROM CYPRUS! How Mrs. Fleming found this remote sunny island in thè eastern Mediterranean to set up school, is anyone’s guess, but it certainly was my good fortune. I had, in fact, just moved to Cyprus myself, having married a charming Greek civil engineer, when I was offered thè opportunity to work at thè newly established TASIS CYPRUS. The following fìve years would be my most memorable in Cyprus. Not only did I get to work with a wonderful group of people, but I also got to know MCF. She was dynamite - effective and strong. Yet when she flew in to Cyprus from either Lugano or

England she was like summer rain — unexpected, cooling and most pleasant. Always smart and chic in her black outfits, she embodied every young woman’s dream of having it all - a successful and satisfying career without losing thè charm and elegance of being a beautiful woman. Cyprus had never seen anyone quite like Mrs. Feming. She charmed mayors, ministers, and even thè police commander. Her students loved her and thè locai staff adored her. She was thè mysterious lady who would pop in to Cyprus now and then and leave everyone in awe of her grace, humor and vision. I had thè great pleasure of working with her

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stili fondly recalls thè hair-raising drive from Pisa airport to thè villa, when MCF picked us up with a cooler full of gin, tonic, and ice and never once let thè speedometer drop below 1 OOkm! She could drink and drive and when my nervo us husband tried to water down her gin with extra tonic, she would shout out for a proper refill!

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TASIS Cyprus

but also of sharing a beautiful summer recess with her at thè villa outside Florence. What a treat it was to spend time with such a legacy! Sharing stories from her past and drinking gin and tonics, she could keep going when all thè rest of us had already passed out. My husband

Great ladies like Mary Crist Fleming are few and far between. We feel honored and privileged to know and to have worked with her. Cyprus sends sincere best wishes on this special occasion. May TASIS go from success to success and may thè vision of MCF always continue through its alumni, faculty, and staff. With fondest regards to all, Marianna and Saverios Vrahimi Nicosia, Cyprus Former TASIS Cyprus Administrator

Mrs. Fleming, Always thè Educator, Speaks to thè Last TASIS Class of thè 20th Century vjood evening and a warm welcome to you dear parents, our fine faculty, and to our beloved students of thè class of 1999! Class of 1999... “99” ...thè very words have a sound of tolling like thè ancient bells in a cathedral tower. Ninety nine — ninety nine - you can almost see and feel thè swinging of thè bell — you’re waiting in full suspense, for it to hit 2000 - thè millennium! The date on which all thè computers and thè whole world are supposed to crash! Even awaiting thè millennium, when you’re as old as I am, 110 years, you view thè world with a kind of detachment, in spite of thè high passion with which you’ve lived your life - you look for hopeful signs. You want to be sure there are no dirty dishes left, that thè laundry is washed, folded and put away, that there is enough food in thè fridge to carry thè family through thè next few days in case you’re away. You want to be sure that thè world is going to be all right. You hope that thè very dichotomy, thè reality of thè war going on today, is really a miracle, for thè people who are dropping thè bombs from

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30,000 feet above are thè same people who are moving in truck loads of food, tents, blankets and medicine! Is this a precursor of thè reai mil­ lennium? Where thè true spirit of man triumphs over evil and thè world undergoes a dramatic reversai from evil to good. What a glorious millennium that would be! Paul Johnson, thè well-known British historian, wrote that we have lived through thè worst century in history. More evil has been perpetrated, has been compressed into thè 20th than all thè other centuries combined. One can thank God it has almost passed! The world’s last nine decades began with thè horrors of World War I, followed by thè miseries of its devastation, thè Great Depression, thè Second World War, thè Holocaust, thè Berlin War and all it signifìed, and possibly thè most terrifying of all - thè creation and expansion of Communism - crushing, torturing, destroying millions of lives, obliterating many of thè remarkable works of art created by man, devastating great stretches of thè richest farmland, enduring for 70 long years.


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I look back on my nine decades of life, a life that spans thè period from thè horse-drawn buggy and thè great transatlantic ships to thè space shuttle and thè walk on thè moon. And my life started with two decades containing thè prosperity of thè ‘20s, to switch harshly into thè ‘30s, thè years of thè Great Depression, when life in my parents’ school was suddenly jolted by a drop from 250 students to 60 or 70 and I was pulled out of college and sent on thè road in a desperate attempt to recruit any possible student at any discount on tuition in an attempt not to be forced to dose thè school. I traveled on $10 a day in a 2-seater Ford convertible - one dollar a night for bed and breakfast, and $9 for gas, food, and telephone calisi How many times, in starting schools in Europe, have I been grateful for thè humbling experience of living through thè Great Depression! Then thè intimations of thè War to come, thè shock of Pearl Harbor - thè entrance of thè U.S. into thè Second World War with radio news of thè daily tragedies, thè Battle of Britain, and thè final miraculous victory 50 years ago over thè evils of Nazism, then Hiroshima, thè surrender of Japan, thè Cold War, thè gaining of independence of so many third-world countries, only to collapse tragically into dictatorships, poverty, and civil wars. And today? Have we transformed thè world into a beautiful place to live?

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create a really big mess, you have to have a com­ puter! The only thing that has not progressed, has not matured, with thè exception, thank God, of many individuai, is man. He stili is a barbarian at heart, witness all thè current conflicts. He is thè only animai who kills for thè sheer joy of killing! History is made up of thè Constant conflict we are reminded of in Hercules’ choice between vice and virtue, of good against evil — literature, thè theatre, poetry, painting, all depict man’s long struggle against evil. Unfortunately, evil can win without seemingly violent means — it can insidiously creep into our civilization and destroy us from within like thè Trojan horse destroyed Troy! The abolition of moral values, thè loss of heroes and heroic deeds, thè Constant

Forgive what you DO NOT APPROVE, AND COMMEND ME FOR THE ENERGETIC EXERTION OF MY TALENT. William Blake

ONGRATULATIONS O THE CLASS OF 99

While history was going on I was starting to fight back! I started a school! I committed myself to education - thè only hope thè world has. Education in values! And for thè next fifty years 5 decades - I committed many follies in an effort to create as many schools as possible, opening and closing several schools - Cyprus, France, - dangerously near starting ones in Spain, Turkey, and lastly Budapest, as thè center of a new Eastern Europe. Wisely, I was stopped at thè brink! There is no doubt that along with thè horrors of this century, man, with his indomitable spirit, his deep sense of humanity and its needs, his inventiveness, has made incredible contributions to our world. Running concurrently with Johnson’s century of horrors, man has produced majestic ocean liners, thè telephone, thè auto­ mobile, thè 757 and thè airbus, space shuttles, thè walk on thè moon, miracles in medicine and life-saving devices - and, of course, dubious contributions — television and thè computer! You’ll have to drag me out of thè 18th century to convince me that these last two have led to a betterment of mankind! To err is human, to

search for pleasures and no thought of personal sacrifice to defend society and thè precious privilege of freedom. With thè loss of these, one wonders whether we are already like thè Roman Empire, on our way to decline and fall! Even civilizations are mortai! You graduates of tomorrow are becoming, in fact already are, part of history and you become part of this struggle against evil that has gone on over thè centuries. Times will always change but values don’t, and true education is not thè knowledge of facts, but of values. You are becoming part of history at an especially criticai and brutal period of history.

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As our American General Omar Bradley said at thè end of thè war: “This is our 20th-century claim to distinction and progress: our knowledge of Science has already outstripped our capacity to control it, we have many man of Science but few men of God. Man is struggling through spiritual darkness while toying with precarious secrets of life and death. The world has achieved brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. We know more about war than we know about peace - more about killing than living!” And Russell Kirk, a man of letters, a philosopher, a man of great spiritual strength stated, “If we are to rescue thè modern mind we must do it very soon. The struggle will be decided in thè minds of thè rising generation!”

He who does not REMEMBER HISTORY IS BOUND TO LIVE THROUGH IT AGAIN. Written on thè walls of Auschwitz

That “rising generation” is, of course, you! Your parents, we your surrogate parents, have many fears about releasing you in another rite of passage, your graduation tomorrow, to total freedom — total freedom of choice. America is in a state of agonizing turmoil, as are many other countries, because they have not held on to values. You will be facing drugs, crime, gangs, and thè incredible stupidity of “Politicai Correctness.” I beseech you to start now as you leave thè beauty, thè protection, thè sense of security of TASIS, to hold onto thè timeless values that your parents and we have tried to instili in you - a love of beauty, a search for knowledge and for thè excitement of learning, truth, honesty, a belief in work, a serious concern for our planet and what we are doing to it, and most importantly a compassion for other and all human

beings, especially those so much less fortunate than we. A dedication to these values will make life meaningful for you, for there is no greater happiness than being of Service to others. Don’t look only at four years of university and a job, for there may not be one. Think and pian boldly and creatively. Think of what thè world most desperately needs and do something about it! Think, create, and do it with passioni And you will succeed. Remember you are thè rising generation, thè generation upon whom thè survival of our civilization depends. Remember too, that an individuai can make a difference and that individuai can be you! Tomorrow morning at your graduation we pay tribute to such an individuai. Our speaker Dr. Sommaruga is President of thè International Red Cross. But thè individuai who saw thè desperate need and at great personal sacrifice had thè courage to create and establish thè Red Cross 136 years ago in 1863 was a Swiss, Henri Dunant. Unless I have an urgent curtain cali, thè millennium seems thè most highly appropriate moment of history for an old lady to pass thè torch, leaving thè world to her remarkable daughter, Lynn Aeschliman, and to you, remark­ able young people that you are! Always remember, even when I’m not here to scold you, times change - values don’t. Always hold on to yours! My warmest and most affectionate good wishes travel with you, thè TASIS Class of Ninety Nine!

Authority is something you take... Nobody can give it to you. If it were possible to rephrase thè famous Beatle song, Mrs. Fleming, I would sing to you: "... Now that Im older, lost all my hair, Many years from then, Will you stili read me? Will you stili know me? When Im sixty four?”

Well, I am 64 today and soon it will be your birthday. Bravo! For your 67 years in education!

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Thanks to you, I feel like a kid today. In fact, you have always kept me young and going because you have always been a never ending source of energy, thè force that Bergson calls, “la création continue”. An ageless force of dynamic joy and creativity, a permanent revival like thè blossoming of thè magnolia tree in front of my classroom window. You are, in thè field of edu­ cation, what Le Nótre was to thè garden of Versailles. I joined you many moons ago, long before thè harvest. You had just a few seeds in


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your hand, three of your own children were helping you to take care of a tiny orchard. At thè time, I worked night shifts at thè Zurich train station, fell asleep in a wagon, woke up in Lugano, got off thè train looking for a job; you put me in thè driver’s seat in Loreto. Your daughter, Gai, a charming and highly efficient adolescent, asked me to follow a blue mini-bus driven by her brother Tom, an elegant young man. We raced back to Zurich, I tried to follow Tom in “my” mini-bus, smashed into a concrete wall in a turn over a bridge, had no time to stop, thè bus was stili running, thè engine was in thè rear. No doubt Tom was teaching me a lesson, but then we had fancy racing gloves and had

amount of time. After driving your young Ambassadors from thè Mesquita de Cordoba to see “Nefretiti” in thè Dahlem museum in Berlin or listening to “La Tosca” at La Scala or thè “Rosenkavalier” at thè Vienna Opera House, strolling with them through thè Uffizi, thè Accademia, Florence, Tuscany, thè Vatican, ancient Rome, thè Bridge of Sighs, San Marco, thè Duomo, Venice, posing for a photo with Tina Uihlein on thè ancient Mostar bridge, a world-famous monument rendered infamous since thè most recent Balkan war has blown it to bits. Sailing in Greece, sunset at Cap Sunion behind thè tempie cradle of our civilization, camping in thè fields, cooking out, far away from camp grounds, swimming in rivers or thè

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Marco with thè three Fleming women Lynn, Mrs. Fleming, and Gai

gone to “Le Mans” to “study” car races. In Zurich we picked up children from thè United States of America. I was promoted from driver to counselor, from thè Zurich airport we drove back to Lugano over thè Alps, no tunnel yet, we went over thè Gotthard pass and down thè steep winding Tremola road...a road my father had walked up and down for years. If he could only see me, proudly driving a bus full of singing, shouting, screaming kids.... Dear Mrs. Fleming, I often wondered why you are so dear to my heart, because of all thè employers I had in my life, you may well be thè one I have been associated with thè minimal

sea, showers from our water tank built on top of thè mini-bus or simply under waterfalls. Driving on thè old Roman roads or thè Route Napoleon because most of Europe was far from beginning to build its toll-ways, rolling on cobble stones, dirt roads or simply red or white dusty tracks in desert landscapes, from Notre Dame of Paris to thè Blue Mosque in Istanbul and beyond. Your way to educate youngsters was more inspiring than any high-flying conference under thè guidance of a board of directors, all of whom could boast PhDs from thè best universities. Your jjiethod, Mrs. Fleming, was more lively than thè internet which had yet to be invented, less boring than classrooms or library books. For you we

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took kids from thè Pacific coast, across thè Atlantic, to thè shores of Tripoli to Alexandria, Cairo, thè Pyramids, up thè Nile, Luxor, riding camels, horses or donkeys, visiting thè Valley of thè Queens and thè Kings, up to thè Aswan Mausoleum. Films were made, articles written, and Swiss Holiday expanded over thè school year into a Post Graduate Program. One day a teacher was ili and you appointed me “replacement teacher”. Thanks to you I could now drive a mini-bus, cook spaghetti for hungry kids, set up tents, drive winter and summer all over Europe, film students, write articles, and teach French and German, sail in Greece, and teach skiing at thè Hotel Monopoi in Andermatt. Better yet, you hired my girlfriend, Mara, who taught Spanish and Italian. We married in Montagnola. We flew to California. Our daughter, Lisa, was born in Santa Monica. She is now a lawyer in Geneva, her husband runs a high-tech computer business, and Mara and I take turns babysitting their two boys. You may think: “What does all that have to do with my birthday?”

I THINK HE KNEW AS I DID NOT, THAT THE WORLD WAS MADE ROUND, NOT FLAT, SO THAT YOU COULD NOT SEE TOO FAR DOWN THE ROAD. Isak Dinesen

As I said before, I stili wonder why we are stili corresponding. Perhaps simply because I have never ceased to admire you, perhaps because one remembers thè first human being who crossed thè Atlantic, thè first who climbed Everest, thè one who claimed that thè earth was not fìat but round, one remembers Madame Curie, not all thè others who followed. You gave me thè kick off, you put me in thè driver s seat, you told me: “Authority is something you take. Nobody can give it to you.” I never had believed I had any authority. I had only dreams, dreams of glory like most kids have. I believed in great achievements that allowed me to get little things done. What you gave me was faith, confidence, and trust. A question stili puzzling me is: “How could you do it, Mrs. Fleming?” How could you pick a wild dreamer off thè road, name him a counselor, fili his bus with thè most valuable passengers, children, one of whom was a thin, pretty and determined adolescent, your own daughter by thè name of Lynn, and send us off for weeks into Franco s Spain, long before portable phones or even phones that worked, were invented. This faith you had in others gave each one of us strength and confidence, thè rest was done by your lucky star. In my youth I was foolish enough to believe that I was a good driver. Now I know that your daugh­ ter Lynn and your young ambassadors had a foolishly lucky driver. You made me a counselor,

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you made me a teacher. How could you do it, Mrs. Fleming? Any drop-out kid was more qualified than I. All my student years I hated school. To me teachers were like weird Martians. One of them once told me: “Only bad students should become teachers, they can relate to drop outs, excellent students don’t need teachers.” Was that thè reason why you had hired me, Mrs. Fleming? Look what you have done: since Loreto I have never taken a sabbatical, never even a holiday. Until today I have taught school, non-stop. During thè school holidays I have been a coun­ selor, teaching sailing or skiing, just as I had done for you in Montagnola, Greece, or Andermatt. Later, when thè roads became too crowded, I taught school during thè school year, joined thè Club Med in St. Moritz to teach ski­ ing during 5 weeks of winter holidays and taught sailing for 2 months summer holidays all around thè world for thè past 33 years. The more years are passing by, thè more Loreto shines in thè past. Then we rushed to climb thè highest mountain, westward bound following thè sun. I can’t remember when thè mountain began going down and thè sun rose at our back. May I thank you yet again for pushing me in thè right direction. It is good to know that you are here so that I can teli you what I can no longer teli my parents. They gave me all thè love of their hearts, you gave me a job. Sony to say I failed to climb thè ladder of “success”. I never wanted to go out of thè classroom to avoid thè “silly kids” and teach teachers how to teach, go from meeting to conference, write reports, attend committees and divide into sub-committees reporting to thè main committee, printing booklets for thè bottom of empty drawers never to be re-opened. You had given me a practical view of education, one of joy and enthusiasm, dose to thè kids, sharing their emotions, understanding them. One might cali it a mission as my daughter does, but to me it’s just an enjoyable job. There is only one more year before they make me retire. Fun is in thè class­ room, stress Comes in thè staff room. I’ll stay with kids in class ever since one of my “star” students displayed his T-shirt. Printed on it was: “How can I soar with eagles, when I work with turkeys.” Candide had great illusions when he said: “Il faut cultiver son jardin.” Not everybody can be Le Nótre. There will only be one Mrs. Fleming. Since my daughter believes that I always need a mission, she is training me for intensive baby-sitting. That includes shopping during rush hour in a crowded super-market with one 4-year old boy


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and one 9-month old boy. The 4-year old runs all over thè place and grabs whatsoever he likes off thè shelves, meanwhile his little brother is screaming his head off, busy customers waiting in line stare at Grandpa thè “mean old man” who made thè baby cry. As I go over thè shopping list, check what’s in thè caddy, hold on to thè baby, drop thè change on thè floor, look for thè elder brother, I become aware that most of thè Swiss government is composed of “male chauvinist pigs” with no idea of what a mother has to endure. “Authority ... you take it Marco, no one can give it to you.”

You see, Mrs. Fleming, over 40 years later, in tiny everyday situations you are with me. Just one more question. You had three children, not just 2 like me in thè supermarket, and you started a small empire. How did you do it? Let me know ten years from now. Happy Birthday! Yours, Marco Marco Hauert Geneva, Switzerland Former Swiss Holiday Counselor

Leading By Example Entering my thirteenth year at TASIS since 1976, I have many rich memories of adventures with thè incomparable Mrs. Fleming: Old Fashions on thè autostrada, Crossing thè Adriatic in search of a hotel near Athens to house TASIS Greece, thè ride of my life in her Mini from TASIS England to Phene Street at night in a downpour to turn off her burglar alarm, predicting thè exact moment of thè sunset from poolside at Capitignano, to mention a few. She has taught me through her exam­ ple so many of thè most important things I now know about teaching, working with people, and life in generai. She tutored me in thè power and thè joy of focusing intensely on each person I meet, of caring about them, of trying to understand what is important to them, of doing what I can to help them feel at ease, showing them respect for their basic dignity as human beings. I learned this by watching her in action at class dinners at Casa Fleming, Board meetings at Capitignano, whenever she gave a speech on Opening Day, Parents Weekend, or Senior Banquet, and in her every conversation. Most of all, I learned this through her treatment of me. Arriving at TASIS very wet behind thè ears as thè new English Department Chair stepping into thè very large shoes of thè legendary Max Page, I was immediately put at ease and charmed by her many kindnesses in those early days of our adjustment to a new school and a new country. Her uncanny memory for and interest in thè personal details of everyone she meets, her sincere awareness that each faculty member and student and parent is a key player in thè important work of making her dream a reality, and her infectious joy of life and gratitude for its bounties won my

heart and devotion from thè beginning. Her confìdence in me gave me confidence in myself as I became Academic Dean, Director of TASIS England Summer Program, and Headmaster Elect of TASIS Greece in quick succession before spending fìve years in thè US expanding our family while working at Deerfìeld Academy. Returning as Headmaster in 1984 for three years and again in 1994,1 have had thè privilege of working with her to increase thè permanence of TASIS through strengthening programs and replacing temporary structures - Prato, Lago, Giardino dorms and thè Bubble - with Monticello, thè Palestra, and Villa del Sole. Over these years I have been humbled and inspired by thè power she has to change lives by broadening horizons and opening hearts through her own modeling of dedication, faith, and deepest caring and love. Mrs. Fleming promises to keep an eye on us from “on high” when thè time comes. We will be looking for her guidance in thè many lessons she has taught us and in thè habits she has instilled in us. She has instilled in each of thè thousands of students and educators she has influenced a sense of responsibility to improve our world by setting high standards for both ourselves and others, by nurturing and preserving what is good and beau­ tiful, and especially by being ever mindful of thè dignity and importance of each human being. May we make her proud of what she has created in us and of her own work and example, which will continue through us.

Anne and Chris Frost with Mrs. Fleming at Capitignano in thè early years

Anne and Chris celebrating their 30th anniversary at thè Personale’s Christmas dinner in De Nobili

J. Christopher Frost Headmaster, TASIS Lugano

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Your Thread Has Encircled thè Globe I thought about suggesting you move your 90th birthday back a year or two. For a woman with your history, that seems a small and unchallenging task. Anyone who has moved libraries in hours, dormitories overnight, and whole campuses across International frontiers in a day or two, could easily alter thè calendar a bit. More simply, I hope our paths will cross sometime in thè next year or two, and you will favor me with a few hours of quieter celebration. In each of our lives, we spin a slender thread which we weave into thè fabric of thè universe. Some of us struggle to keep thè thread from unraveling or getting tied in knots. Not you. Your thread has encircled thè globe, been woven into thè flags of many nations, and has educated and enriched thè lives and touched thè hearts of thousands.

Ken Blessing as our youngest Headmaster

Warmest regards, Ken Blessing Moretown, Vermont Former TASIS Headmaster, Lugano 1971-75 and England 1976-78

Great Good Fortune

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•steiàL: Sharon and Lyle Rigg with Mrs. Fleming at Lyie’s farewell dinner

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xvfter almost two decades with Mrs. Fleming in Europe, Sharon and I returned home to America in thè summer of 1998. Now that almost two years have passed and we have settled in to life at The Pennington School in New Jersey, we have had many occasions to reflect on our years with TASIS and with Mrs. Fleming. Although both Sharon and I could write about any number of remembrances, two that remain vivid in my mind took place at Lux II, a Chinese restau­ rant in Virginia Water.

Throughout our 17 years in England, some of thè most enjoyable evenings that Sharon and I spent with Mrs. Fleming were at Lux IL Although we often went there with colleagues, there also were many occasions when Sharon and I went there alone with Mrs. Fleming. And our menu selections rarely varied - chicken/corn soup to start (Mrs. Fleming’s favorite), spring rolls, fried seaweed (Sharons favorite), crispy duck (everyone’s favorite), shredded beef, egg fried rice, ice cream and, of course, fortune cookies. (We all used to take as many fortune cookies as required to obtain a fortune that appealed to us!) Given thè hectic pace of life at TASIS England, Lux II became an island of cairn — a place not only to talk about TASIS, but also about so many other things. In short, Lux II is thè place where Sharon and I felt we really had an opportunity to get to know Mrs. Fleming - a place where our admiration for her work and for her grew and grew. Not surprisingly, it was at Lux II that Sharon and I enjoyed our last meal with Mrs. Fleming in England before returning to thè U.S. In early June, 1998, thè three of us enjoyed a farewell Chinese meal together - just prior to Sharon’s


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departure for thè U.S. (Sharon’s return preceded my return by a couple of weeks.) Two weeks later, on one of my last nights in England, Mrs. Fleming insisted on taking me to Lux II for one last time - just thè two of us. Since I had already sold my car, Mrs. Fleming drove in her Mini. What an evening we had together! We feasted on our special menu, we talked, we laughed, we reminisced, and we devoured a suitable number of fortune cookies. Unfortunately, no matter how much we ate, drank and talked, thè time eventually arrived for us to return to Thorpe. As we were leaving Lux II, Mrs. Fleming and I hugged several times before climbing into her Mini for thè drive back to Thorpe. When we arrived at Walnut Tree Cottage, I think that we both realized simultaneously that we couldn’t really say another goodbye. Mrs. Fleming dropped me off and I knew that I had to walk straight for thè door of Walnut Tree Cottage without saying anything and without looking back at Mrs.

Fleming sitting in her Mini. I think that we both wanted our farewell dinner at Lux II to be thè final memory of our time working together in England. Although Sharon and I are happy to be home in America (it was thè right decision for us), we have not found a Lux II with crispy duck and fried seaweed, and we certainly haven’t found another Mrs. Fleming! As for fortune cookies, who needs them? When I lefìt America for England andTASIS in thè fall of 1979, I could never have dreamed of having thè great good fortune of meeting two women who would change my life forever. One would have to eat a mountain of fortune cookies to be blessed with a fortune as special as having Sharon and Mrs. Fleming as part of your life! Lyle Rigg Pennington, New Jersey Former TASIS England Headmaster, 1979-1998

The Best Teacher We Have Ever Had lo think it all started over a few “Old-fashioneds” in Runnymede—were we honoring thè Magna Carta or talking about thè future of TASIS? From that fìrst meeting you charmed and inspired Beth and me and made us want to join your family—TASIS—and to share our lives with you and your school in England, and we have lived each day celebrating that commitment. You have entered our world as no one else has or could, showing us thè richness, thè potential, and thè grace each person possesses. Your life and how you live it and lead it are thè greatest education you have given Beth, Will, Mary Fleath, and me, and we will always be indebted to you for being thè best teacher we have ever had. To have been honored by bringing in thè millennium with you was perhaps thè most special of many special times we have been blessed to share with you. I stili want to know what kind of divinity you were invoking on that special occasion—only you could have somehow known Saxon, in a moment of primal, canine instinct, would snare a pig for our millennium dinner! To turn upset— even thè potentially tragic—into something meaningful and almost redemptive puts you in thè company of thè Greeks! (I can hear you say­ ing now, “Of course, I grew up with Zeus!”)

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Dennis with Mrs. Fleming

You are a true Olympian, and your deeds are grandly Greek in scale and effect. As we cele­ brate your 90th birthday, we honor those 90 years of giving unfailingly to others, of inspiring all of us by your example of selflessness and love of others. Thank you for sharing thè past two years with us and for shaping our lives as indelibly as you have shaped so many before us. With all of our love and fondest wishes for thè grandest 90th birthday celebration on record, we are Most lovingly yours, Dennis Manning, Headmaster, TASIS England and Beth, Will, and Mary Heath

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When Style Becomes Class After 27 years which started off as a one-year leave of absence from Design School, how do I describe what Mrs. Fleming has meant to me and others she has touched during her lifetime? I am a product of her vision, her love of life, and most importantly her incredible ability to inspire and light thè world of those who are fortunate enough to know this remarkable woman. On a recent trip, I was reading thè International Herald Tribune when I carne across a Swissair ad that summed up my image of Mrs. Fleming perfectly. It also reminded me of a much earlier TWA ad of a younger Mrs. Fleming striding confidently down thè tarmac at an airport dressed in her usuai elegant style. The Swissair text read: I wonder when style becomes class? Style comes and goes But when it comes and stays, it’s class. Either way, it begins with care And runs through everything we do. Swissair — We care.

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Fernando receiving one of many embraces from Mrs. Fleming

If we replace Swissair with TASIS, it would become thè ideal TASIS ad. As I reflect on what has made TASIS such a special school for so many students and faculty, it is thè imprint of Mrs. Fleming’s style and convictions. Whether it be historic architecture and beautiful settings, silver and chandeliers, dress code and discipline, manners and civility, graciousness and hospitality, leadership and Service, honor and integrity, pride and respect, community and individuality, tradition and innovation, pomp and circumstance, thè TASIS image is Mrs. Fleming and vice-versa. Rarely does an institution reflect thè beliefs of thè founder so clearly and completely as does TASIS. And MCF s style is in a class of its own. But above all it is thè word “care” that best describes thè TASIS experience and Mrs. Fleming. I am privileged to have been part of her world for most of my adult life and to have shared it with my children. The influence she has had on my family is all encompassing, as is TASIS. The opportunities and challenges have enriched and stretched my life in ways I could never have imagined when I fìrst arrived in 1972. Whether it be starting a Fine Arts department in Lugano, restoring a hamlet in thè south of France, travelling throughout thè world to recruit students, designing master plans for our campuses, or working to improve and expand TASIS programs throughout Europe, my myriad of experiences have become more a way of life than a job. My world expanded to fili Mrs. Fleming’s dreams. So how does style become class? By sustaining one’s core beliefs, remaining steadfast to people one can trust and to ideas that have stood thè test of time. And above all by caring. This is thè most important ingredient of all and Mrs. Fleming has been thè ultimate educator and role model in what matters most — to care. Reai lead­ ership is about moving thè heart, and Mrs. Fleming has moved more hearts than anyone I will ever know. Fernando Gonzalez TASIS Administrative Director Thorpe, England

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Has Anything Changed in thè Last Ten Years? I have known Mrs Fleming virtually all my life. We met when she was 33 and I was 3. Ten years ago for her eightieth Birthday I wrote in this hook about my childhood recollections of her and thè tremendous impact she has had on me throughout my life. How can I say any more about my love and admiration for her now than I did then? Could anything be different ten years on? Anything new? If you were to ask my husband Peter or my 23year-old-son Ronald, they would say that Mrs Fleming has changed very little in thè last ten years. She continues to breathe energy into their lives, and her generosity towards them and concern for them are profound and touching. I see in Ronald s eyes thè same utter delight and wonderment that I felt about her at his age. A trip to London to have dinner with Mrs Fleming cause» excitement and is an event to anticipate. But to me something has changed. Ten years ago, although I was 50,1 stili felt like a child in Mrs Femings family, and she at 80 was ageless, stili that indomitable force, thè “adult ’ in my life. In a most naive way I took her exceptional abilities and energy for granted because our relationship had really not changed since I was a child. She was thè same Mrs Fleming I had always known, who continued to achieve remarkable things, yet stili had time to stand by me and support me. In thè decade between my 50th and 60th birthdays I am thè one who has changed. My understanding of thè aging process has changed. My contemporaries are grandparents now, downsizing their lives, retiring, shedding responsibilities, and falling victim to cancer and heart disease. We complain about forgetfulness, wrinkles, aches and pains, and many of us are beginning to disengage from thè activities that have occupied our lives. Society accepts this as thè last, great “passage” of ones life.

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Mrs. Fleming with Betsy and brother

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Wally, both Frog Hollow alumni

seemed to live on an aeroplane, and jet lag never slowed her down. She always looked immaculate, her clothes, her hair stylish and perfect. That extraordinary spirit and determination seemed to defy thè aging process in a way that I am just becoming able to appreciate. And what of thè last decade? Today she looks thè same as she did ten years ago, as she did thirty years ago. She continues to roar around in her little black mini, and is a celebrity at numerous airports around thè world. Her memory is EXTRAODINARY. Her brain does not miss a trick. She has withdrawn from thè day-to-day running of thè schools and has been able to do this because her daughter Lynn is so able and committed to TASIS. But she is not resting on

Betsy with Mrs. Fleming, Anna, Lynn, Adrien, thè Cerbais and Piera Galli

NOT MRS FLEMING! At 60 she was just getting started. I cannot irhagine where thè ener­ gy carne from to start schools in Florence, Athens, Cyprus, and at age 67, at Thorpe in England, not to mention thè numerous summer school programs. She had to find thè properties, negotiate with bankers, renovate thè buildings, interview headmasters, produce thè literature to attract thè children, and that is just thè tip of thè iceberg. When she wasn’t burning up thè highway, she

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her laurels and stili follows thè key issues, both large and small, with passionate interest. But this has given her more time to spend with students and with us, her extended family, for she is exceptionally thoughtful and caring, and she continues to sustain so many of us. In Lugano, she has all thè students in small groups to dinner at Casa Fleming, and she loves it when some stay on chatting with her far into thè night. Her impact on several generations of younger people continues to this day. She has never lost her interest and enthusiasm for thè

young and she remembers exactly what they say to her on these late-night occasions. She makes them feel valued and good about themselves, just as she has done for me over nearly 60 years. This ability to make one feel special, her profound interest in people, sustained by her undiminished intelligence and humanity, has surely kept her young, and is for us all significant and inspiring. Betsy Newell Oxford, England Director, TASIS’ Le Chàteau des Enfants

A Fateful Meeting or A Friendship to Cherish so naturally she felt free to note thè shortcomings in thè production even at this venue thè Brits seem to regard so reverentially. (We agreed with her: Ben Jonson had been rendered well nigh unintelligible by tinkering.) Then off to a late supper at an excellent restaurant, accompanied by animated conversation. The play was, clearly, thè least interesting thing about thè evening!

Judy and David Kovacs, with Lynn and children Ellen Kovacs, Adrien and Anna Aeschliman, and Mark Kovacs in Free Union, Virginia

We first met Mary Crist Fleming in Free Union, Va., where Lynn and Michael had moved in 1984. Little did we know what a fateful meet­ ing this would prove to be and what a wonderful string of delightful occasions it was ushering in. Over thè years we have seen Cris thè captivating hostess, Cris thè charming guest and raconteuse, Cris thè adventurer of flamboyance and panache, and thè teeniest bit of Cris thè builder of school empires. We realized early on that there was behind these, Cris thè friend, who cared deeply for thè people she carne across. We have valued all of these personae over thè years, but none more than thè last. We bring here a few memories in honor of (but surely someone has thè math wrong?) her ninetieth birthday. We think of Cris driving us in her Mini around London on thè way to thè National Theatre. Make way, you Brits, for thè lady with thè no-nonsense manner and thè propensity to correct minor faults in thè locai driving rules! See how she angles thè car brilliantly into a space no bigger than a large suitcase! Cris was our hostess that evening and had paid for our tickets,

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We think of Cris organizing a picnic outing in thè Italian countryside from Capitignano. Excellent food neatly packed up in wicker baskets, a carefree holiday mood, and, when thè proper picnic spot unaccountably failed to show up, thè delightful knack for jollying everyone into good humor as we sat in thè hot sun among thè stubble of a farmer’s vineyard. Then there was thè Christmas we were snowbound in Capitignano. What fun that was, coping with thè weather! And thanks to Cris’s prudent manage­ ment, there was plenty of Jack Daniels on hand. Then there was thè time we took her to dine at high table in thè great Hall of Christ Church, Oxford, built by Henry Vili, where we had a con­ nection that semester. She was impressed, of course, by her surroundings, as who would not be? But she was certainly not overawed, and she gave as good as she got to thè (somewhat intimidating) Oxford dons she sat next to at dinner in Hall and at dessert in thè Common Room. Dinner can be a bit of a competitive indoor sport, especially with foreigners present, and we felt that evening that thè Yanks had done well in thè contest! Then there was thè time that one of us was invited to address thè graduation ceremonies at


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TASIS England. What an impressive outfìt that was, how articulate, funny, and well-mannered thè graduates were! The ceremony was done in thè high Fleming style, as was dinner thè night before and thè reception afterwards: dignifìed and cheerful demeanor in young and old alike, remarks brimming with heartfelt appreciation from thè students, and apt words, delivered exquisitely, from thè Director herself, followed by delicious food, stylishly presented. There was no mistaking, whose hand was at work here. There was also no mistaking, even without thè explicit comments to that effect, thè great respect and affection with which thè students regard her. Here, we thought, was a school anyone would be proud to be connected with.

stili lives) a highly complicated life, with enormous demands on her time. We were good friends with Lynn and Michael, and we thought to begin with that Cris’s warm manner to us was merely thè gracious hostess doing what one does to thè friends of one’s daughter and son-in-law. But it rapidly became apparent that she had taken us, in our own right, to her heart. This is a friendship to cherish and one that means more to us than we can easily put into words. David and Judith Kovacs Charlottesville, Virginia Professors, University of Virginia

David celebrating New Years 1996 with MCF

And what can we say of Cris thè friend? When we first met her, Cris was living (as she

What Blessings She Has Poured Upon Their Lives Jt/veryone who knows her, every one of her thousands of children and friends, gratefully knows what blessings she has poured upon their lives. The extent of this largesse is well documented. Partly, of course, because although we were not her children, she has always been for us and for our own children not just that model of dignity, of grace, of ambassadorial rank in everything but name, not just Mrs. Fleming, but “Little Mother”, thè origin of which (surely) affectionate sobriquet is lost - as so much mercifully else — in thè mists of time or Tuscany. Unforgettable will always be what inspires thè affection. In her public life she has handed to generations of headmasters and teachers thè freedom to educate, to bring on into thè world all those fortunate children, many of them Americans; to bring them up in beautiful places and to share with them many other beautiful places; to change their lives by giving them Switzerland, Italy, France, Europe; by showing them what is good and what is beautiful. So it is in that hallowed polyptych of her less public life, many lovely places given over tirelessly to thè enjoyment of dogs and family and friends: thè Torre di Gattaio, Capitignano, Montagnola and its blossoming campus, 3 Phene Street in Chelsea, and who knows how many exquisite haunts besides. A less selfìshly secured existence is hard to picture.

Christopher, ever

Inexhaustible courage and matchless curiosity about other people’s lives, these are two of thè elements of Little Mother’s nature. The loyalty and thè generosity are legendary, thè delight in thè happiness of others, thè joy to be at thè theatre, every sort of theatre, thè will to communicate with people of all tempers and languages, thè least American American, in whom nothing changes over thè years save a generai tendency away from gin in favor of bourbon, in whom no grain of her own great beauty fades: thè love of our lives.

attentive to Little Mother and his lovely wife Koukla

Christopher MacLehose London, England Publisher and Chairman, Harvill Press

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My Most Serious Competitor 1 he flrst time I carne to London to meet Christopher’s family, thè fìrst visit was to this enchanting very un-American lady named by Christopher, “Little Mother”. There was nothing “little” about her, and thè immense affection there was between those two made me think that a few years younger, thè “Mother” would have been my most serious competitor! But that affection was immediately extended to me, and “Little Mother” she became to me and our fami­ ly for thè rest of our lives. I will keep thè vision of thè famous legs proudly shown on thè steps of Capitignano, or thè ones of Cremona’s Duomo; thè photo was taken a few minutes before savoring Little Mother’s favorite ice creami She is part of us as we know we are part of her. Rendez-vous in ten years! Koukla MacLehose London International Literary Agent

Koukla and Little Mother on thè Duomo steps in Cremona

My Legs Are Stili Good Looking, But They Don t Function Anymore! I went to see Awocato/Lawyer Rusca thè other day and after thè business part we had a chat about various things. We talked about TASIS and naturally Mrs. Fleming soon was thè topic. Avvocato Rusca said: “I saw her a few days ago and I told her that she seemed to be in remarkable shape”. She answered, throwing up her skirt - “My legs are stili good looking, but they don’t function anymore”!

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Mrs. Fleming, thank you for your humor at all times, your kindness and especially your tremendous generosity in sharing your living space with others. I have learnt a great deal from you. Two thousand good wishes for your health and thè years to come. Lotti Turner Montagnola, Switzerland Former TASIS Director ofAdmissions

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Lotti with Mrs. Fleming


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The Lady Who Changed My Life Is Also Only Human MLrch 1967: Thanks to a careless gravel-truck driver outside Magnolia, Arkansas, our beautiful bottle green Ford Mustang 3500 convertible was wiped out on a bridge embankment and in it my precious violin and my poor head. With one eye and a lot of help from thè locai sheriff and a great plastic surgeon I was able to move on — not on my predetermined schedule, not very presentable - a man from TASIS looking like thè result of a pub-brawl! Mrs. Fleming very considerately suggested a recuperation period at a beautifully located villa in Sea Island, Georgia. Wonderful... Nothing was expected of me except to get better and let my face heal. We wined and dined out most evenings and we became integrated in thè locai social scene — thè MCF formula to conquer her surroundings! My admiration for this extraordinary lady, my female boss, grew even more to see her out of Lugano, La Boissiere, out of Europe. A stroll in thè adjacent garden was dramatically interrupted by an almost inarticulate shriek of a woman. I

rushed back to thè house under moss-behung ancient trees and what did I see? My never fearful idol in absolute horror, dancing from one foot to thè other accompanied by screams. The reason for this ordeal? A little innocent snake at thè feet of my beloved heroine. A quick, masculine, strong and decisive action eliminated thè source of despair. The moral of thè story? I was delighted to see and feel that thè lady, who changed my life, is also only human and can be caught off-guard when confronted with thè charm of thè jungle.

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Mary and Gerhard Schwarzacher with Mrs. Fleming

I must say that I have admired her even more, ever since! Gerhard Schwarzacher St. Anton, Austria Former TASIS Representative

That Formidable Machine It is now more than thirty years since we fìrst met “Mrs. Fleming” at thè school which she had founded in a beautiful villa in Lugano. We had never encountered an institution like it or a person even remotely like her. Of course, every person is unique, and many are dedicated to a cause, but some are more unique and dedicated than others. Mary Crist Fleming attains thè maximum in both respects. Some years later, and knowing her as we had come to do, entering thè bar of thè Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong and finding her in earnest conversation with a man unknown to us, we took it for granted that there would now be an American School in Hong Kong. If we were mistaken, thè loss is certainly that of Hong Kong. Some dedicated people come on rather too strong for comfort, but this gentle and unassuming person radiating friendliness and modesty gives no hint of thè power of thè dynamo within. That formidable machine has been dedicated to a life work in education which has changed and

Lady Cris with Lady Dojean

With good friend Sir Peter

enriched thè lives of many people throughout thè world. No other person that we can think of has done more to propagate on foreign soil in thè most practical way all that is valuable in thè American heritage. But for those of us who are just her friends, even to think of her brings a warm glow of pleasure. Sir Peter and Lady Dojean Smithers Vico Morcote, Switzerland

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The Two Great Hugs of My Life ATs. Flemings hugs and embraces are sincere, strong, meaningful, memorable, and they leave lipstick on your cheek! The fìrst time I met her, we shook hands. It started in London, in thè Swinging Sixties. Mary Hart and I were sharing a “Residence for Young Ladies” opposite thè British Museum. I was working for a publisher. One evening, during dinner with American friends of my parents, thè conversation turned to their daughter Wendy’s boarding school in Switzerland. I must have mentioned something about what fun it would be to work in Switzerland, because they suggested that I write to Mrs. M. Crist Fleming, Founder and Director of The American School in Switzerland, to see whether there might be a possible future secretarial vacancy. “Mrs. Fleming likes British secretaries, as they are well trained, accurate, and dependable,” thè American friends told me. I wrote, and I was offered thè job as her personal secretary and assistane I began work in October 1968 and here I am, in 2000, perhaps stili well trained, accurate and dependable! I heard later, via thè grapevine, that I was hired because Mrs. Fleming liked my name, Sarah Rushbrook-Williams, and because of my handwriting, but I don’t believe it. I think it was because she liked British secretaries! Gai Fleming met me at thè Lugano train sta­ tion, took me to thè campus, and introduced me to her mother. We shook hands, and I start­ ed work in thè tower of Casa Fleming.

The first “great hug” and lipstick smudge was on my wedding day! Mrs. Fleming wished me well, and whispered in my ear that she

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would be anxiously awaiting my return when thè honeymoon was over! In addition to thè happiness of my wedding day - I was on kissing-cheek-to-cheek terms with my boss, Mrs. Fleming!

Many small lipstick-smudging kisses and hugs followed, until thè second “great hug”... thè hug Mrs. Fleming gave my daughter, Giorgia, when she graduated from TASIS in June 1998. What a wonderful reward for me! A lifetime at TASIS and two great hugs!

'*235*

Sarah Di Lenardo Secretary to Mrs. Fleming Montagnola, Switzerland


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Dearest Cris - it has been ever thus! Oalutations, congratulations, and warmest love to you on your Ninetieth Birthday.

has to go to New York for a Board Meeting.” Dearest Cris - it has been ever thus!!

What an innings and what achievements in an eventful, passionate, colorful, immensely stylish and successful life and business career. Others will chronicle these achievements better than I — but you are unique. It is our friendship, which goes back so many years, that is so particularly special and important to me. Indeed it has been an essential feature of my life, since I was a young man. My diary for 1969, somewhat self-consciously recording an European peregrination after graduating from Oxford, notes that our fìrst meeting took place in thè early evening of August 8th in thè tower at TASIS. I had driven thè slow way from Geneva in my Swedish motor car, (“What kind of car is a Volvo - for God’s sake.” MCF), and arrived rather weary. All this changed in a flash. “Mrs. Fleming greets me with a wonderful handshake and an immensely strong gin - and I know I have arrived. Mrs. F... has a great sense of humor and is very good value - but thè poor thing is overburdened with end-of-semester work and

From those distant but not forgotten days - thè fìrst days at Vezia and Mr. Mellon’s publicity film, ‘fili today, we have been thè best and fìrmest of friends. Capitignano has provided, through your person­ al magic, a wonderful and unique refuge for all members of my family. Our Easter visits — trips to Florence, picnics in thè snow with bonfìres, walking up to San Cresci for mass, are indelibly etched in my memory. My father, Richard, was happiest there of all places. Fittingly, his grandson was conceived in that blessed house. If I have a regret, it is that in these most recent years, I have not been able to see you as often as we both would like. That has not dimmed our love and friendship, which will never die. Nigel Blackwell Oxford, England Chairman, Blackwell Publishing

Naturalmente quella che meglio si conserva è la “guapa” Mrs. Fleming All a domanda se MCF ha influito sulla mia vita, posso rispondere che con la sua energia, con la sua creatività, è stata l’esempio che mi ha fatto decidere di restare nel mondo dell’educazione. Di MCF, con la quale non persi mai il contat­ to durante questi 33 anni, vorrei sottolineare la sua grande capacità di amare la gente che la porta a esprimere con un sorriso, un abbraccio, un gesto, una espressione di giubilo, il suo piacere di rivedere le persone che ha conosciuto durante la sua vita ed accogliendo con lo stesso entusiasmo parenti ed amici di amici.

Mimi Quadri, Mrs. Baker, Mrs. Fleming, Lynn Fleming, Luigi Caglio, reporter from II Corriere del Ticino, at Villa Negroni, June, 1966

Per questa sua enorme capacità affettiva non è possibile non volerle bene. Mimi Quadri Madrid, Spaia Former TASIS Teacher

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Mrs. Fleming with Mimi after 30 years

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Revisiting Old Haunts for thè future. When she heard we were heading south to Tuscany she insisted with her usuai generosity that we stay at her house, Capitignano. Mrs Fleming is one of those people to whom it is impossible to say no, so we changed our travel plans and took her up on her offer. As soon as we arrived we were greeted by thè faithful Signori Cerbai whose twins Piero and Paolo, now grown up, had been first campers at CDE and then counselors. We spent 3 days radiating out from Capitignano to thè remembered sites of Florence, Siena and San Gimignano, returning in thè late afternoons to enjoy a swim in thè pool, eat Parma ham with fresh figs picked from thè huge tree on thè terrace, and sip red wine as thè sun set over thè Tuscan hills and thè stars carne out one by one. It was magic - thank you Mrs Fleming.

John in thè early years with La Grande Dame

In 1997 we decided it was time to revisit a few old haunts and so we planned a trip through Lugano and on to Tuscany. We had not returned to Lugano since 1986 when we stopped running Le Chàteau des Enfants, though we had kept in contact with many TASIS people and had several times visited TASIS England. We had not seen Mrs. Fleming for quite a few years and it was a pleasant surprise when thè telephone in our room at thè Bellavista rang and thè unmistakable voice of MCF filled thè air. By chance she was in Lugano and she insisted on inviting us to lunch.

We wish you a wonderful birthday filled with fun and happiness and many more to follow.

Lynn and Anna were also there and we had a wonderful time sitting on thè terrace of Casa Fleming reminiscing about old times, talking about present lives, and discussing thè future plans for thè campus. We were delighted to find Mrs. Fleming had not changed: she looked thè same, stili had her prodigious memory, her mind bubbled with ideas and as always was making plans

Michèle and John Watson Luxembourg Former TASIS Faculty and Former Directors of Le Chàteau des Enfants

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I Have Never Been So Upstaged in My Life! Th e famous British actor Robert Morley called me from thè Hotel Beaurivage during spring break many decades ago for advice on schools for his 14-year-old son, Wilton. He arrived for a visit in his Bentley during a blizzard with a storm raging. In his thick British accent Mr. Morley said, “I wouldn’t send a sick dog to Le Rosey.” Cris Fleming kept coming to mind. Mr. Morley, to avoid thè weekend blizzard, wanted to visit Lugano for better weather. I recommended that he visit The American School in Switzerland. Robert Morley rose to his full height and stated that he didn’t want an American School. I persuaded him at least to look at TASIS. Mr. Morley liked to catch schools unawares, but I phoned TASIS and spoke to Robert Wilson to warn him. Mrs. Fleming had already left for Florence, but when she heard thè news, she turned around and returned to Lugano. On Monday, I received a phone cali: “Richard, Morley here.” “Did you go to Lugano?” “Yes, I did. I have never been so upstaged in my life!” “Where will you send your son?” “The American School. I wouldn’t dare send him anywhere else. I would never hear thè end of it from Mrs. Fleming!”

Robert Morley with Michael Aeschliman

Le Chàteau de la Boissiere

The French Adventure Mrs. Fleming was determined to find a property in France, so her students could learn French. She asked me to come and see Le Chàteau de la Boissiere. I found six striking students and potted geraniums around thè pool for photos for thè brochure. I kept asking what thè Chàteau had been - no answer. I fìnally found out that it had been a “road house”. When I am asked what Mrs. Fleming is really like, I say, “She is thè only person I know who could buy a brothel, do it over, and sell it to thè Catholic Church!”

Jack Rich, Florida Long-time educational consultant andfriend

You told me you were a survivor ... and in 2000 your word is stili good!

at a TASIS England graduation

Robert Hixon Glore, one ofmany suitors! Lake Forest, Illinois Alumni Parent and Grandparent

!■■■ III!

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Images from thè ‘30s rmr4#Bgfc

The many personas of Mrs. Fleming... here thè Bride (notice no groom or other meni) MCF thè Feminist par excellence!

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Ford-ing Europe Wildcliff in Europe - November, 1937... Through thè Windshield Sees France, Switzerland, Italy, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Holland, England, Scotland, Ireland. At thè Wheel - Mary Cristi Mary Crist: White Doeskin gloves (even in Yugoslavia), fresh lipstick, Bandanas that match(l), Bill, subdued nail polish, arguing with thè staid British, a smile that would melt an iceberg. Quote: “Pardon me, but are you holding a snake?”

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1937 Mary Crist, Maggie, Holly, Lil, Evelin Ford-ing Europe

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I Was Hooked If you were to get up and sing Happy Birthday, shes thè sort of lady who’d appreciate it”, said John Amis.

hand: “Come on dear, we need more champagne!” I followed a very elegant pair of legs swiftly down a spirai staircase to thè cellars of her chàteau.

Well, it was her chàteau. And it was her birth­ day, 1987. And we were her guests. And we had just had a few days of exquisite French chamber music. We owed her something.

And I have been enthusiastically following those elegant legs ever since. And I thank my lucky stars I found her, and her students, and faculty, and a thousand rich experiences.

From thè moment she swept into thè salon, arms spread to embrace us all, smile wide as thè world, I was hooked. Seconds later she grabbed my

John Watts London, England Actor and Baritone

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With La Signora

Ad Multos Annos

Rick McGrath with, (I. to r.) Rose Bishop, Mrs. Fleming,

love, with her, and all that TASIS represents, and so each year I postponed my leaving, with an apology to God, whom I rather think has a soft spot for Mrs. Fleming as well. I hope that doesn’t sound blasphemous. It isn’t meant to be, for I am a Catholic priest now, just eight years later than intended, and stili in love with Mrs. Fleming, and stili gratefiil for thè wonderful experiences and opportunities that TASIS gave me.

and Diana Dearth

I was watching thè old film “In The Garden of Allah” on thè television one day. You may remember that Charles Boyer is a Trappist monk who leaves his monastery and falls in love with Greta Garbo. Well, who wouldn’t? I went to TASIS England in 1987, intending to stay for a year, and then begin studies for thè Catholic priesthood. But, of course, I met Mrs. Fleming, and fell in

The ancient Latin greeting for birthdays and other anniversaries is: “Ad multos annos” - “many more years.” Amen to that, and I look forward to celebrating Mrs. Fleming s lOOth with her. Father Rick McGrath Ashstead, Surrey, England Former TASIS England Faculty

Mentor and Role Model JVIentor and role model - you ever will be!

To stretch and to risk... Make a mark, make a difference - your unwritten decree. There’s just one life out there, we hear you say with a smile. Get going, don’t waste a minute; Make thè world better, more beautiful - and do it with style! Energy, enthusiasm, confidence - hope and dreams;

You continue to hold up an ideal That keeps us all striving for a world better — than it so often seems! ri ■ • Thank you, Cris, for being you and for touching our lives! Ray and Lenita Robbins Zermatt, Switzerland Former TASIS Headmaster, 1961-1968

Ray and Lenita Robbins with daughter, Heather Carley, and son, Kris. Lugano, 1999

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Some of her Favorites .

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Cris Fleming with and her favorite lawyer,

her favorite cousin,

Alex Korach

Ros Gilpatric

and one of her favorite Coors sons, Pete

and some of her favorite men:

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Assistant Chef Fabio, Chef Elia, Fleadmaster Chris Frost, and Flead maintenance man Bruno

With her best friend FHolly Coors and and, of couse, as proud mother of Lynn, Tom, and Gai

daughter Lynn

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■Hjtitf'Uìì itili and her favorite dog, Saxon

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The Role You Have Played in My Life ajmr

"V^hen requested to write this tribute my mind went on a whirlwind of thoughts. How can I put down in words such strong feelings of love and admiration? I stili don’t know thè reai answer, but I do want you to see how much of a role you have played in my life. These past ten years of my life have probably been thè most formative and transforming for me. I went from a young girl to a young adult, and I hope that I am playing thè role well. Whenever I have doubts in my mind, I have learned to stop and ask myself, “Would Nonna approve of thè way I am acting?” You have taught me patience, love, kindness, and compassion by example. Watching you treat everyone as respectfully as you do, no matter what their status, has taught me how we are all human beings, and should treat each other that way. My hope and prayer is that I can take everything you have taught me either by exam­ ple or advice and put it into practice.

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Nonna with (from I. to r.) Daniella, Gai, Anna, and Lynn

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Nonna with her two granddaughters Daniella and Anna

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I love you Nonna, and I hope that you have a wonderful 90th birthday. I can’t wait for thè lOOth!!! ■Ctam

Your granddaughter Anna Aeschliman Montagnola, Switzerland

Nonna with granddaughter Daniella, daughter Gai, and grand­ daughter Anna

The Birthday Girl Herself The other day, I was explaining thè scale of my Nonna’s ninetieth birthday party to one of my friends. That automatically led to a description of thè birthday girl herself. There’s an inevitable vocabulary to describe Nonna, including words such as amazing, phenomenal, inspiring, and big-hearted. I have certainly been at thè receiving end of all these qualities. Nonna has a way of calling me higher, of expecting more from me, of challenging me to be a student, a lady, a thinker, and a giver. I have learned to appreciate thè beauty of thè ideal picnic spot, of thè perfect bourbon oldfashioned, of thè fìnest view. She has taught me to love languages and learning, and, most importantly, she has been one of those who have shown me how to love other people. Nonna teaches by example. I love and respect

Nonna with Lynn, Daniella, Gai, and Anna

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you very much and am so happy for you on thè occasion of your ninetieth birthday. Your granddaughter Daniella Case Durham, North Carolina

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She Never Puts Up With Second Best '.V

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Nonna, or Mrs. Fleming as thè rest of thè

thè next millennium thè world around Mrs. Fleming has changed drastically, but she has held strong to her standards and like a fine antique has shown to those young persons around her a glimpse of thè old-world charm. She has retained her value because of a steadfast striving for what is good, or as in her case, for what is perfect. She never puts up with second best and therefore encourages those around her to do their best. Around her she has created a world that lives up to her standards, her ideals. Her schools do not institutionalize students but open their eyes to thè beauty around them and to living life as a civilized human being. She has created a legacy that will last at least another 90 years!

world knows her, is an antique, and like antiques she has retained her value or in this case values. During thè last century and into

Her grandson Adrien Aeschliman Montagnola, Switzerland

Nonna and Adrien in cahoots with thè bourbon bottle

To Eliminate Chaos Delving into TASIS archivai materials, as I have been privileged to do these past months, has only intensifìed my knowledge of and feelings towards thè magnifìcent lady we are honoring. Evidence of her imaginative and creative vision for TASIS is apparent on every piece of correspondence, every illustrative brochure, every admonition in speech or written message - - all geared towards a successful fulfillment of her dreams of using International education to “eliminate chaos,” one of her favorite themes.

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Through thè years, her personal warmth and unstinting friendship have highlighted my TASIS times. No better summing up could be offered than that written by thè Editor of The Lyoness, in her dedication of thè 1943 yearbook ofThe Mary Lyon School (her parents’ school): Mary Crist Fleming Thank you, dear God, for a person Who knows your day from night, Who in this world of shadows Sees life in its true light.

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And grant she walks forever Without reproach or fear, Please keep her always as she is - Direct, steadfast, sincere. As always, dear Mrs. Fleming, your Emma Christine Archivist and Former TASIS Librarian


N I N E T I E S

Lynn Fleming Aeschliman Addresses TASIS Alumni at thè Washington Reunion A warm welcome to each of you! It is wonderful to see so many of our alumni. And, it is an honor to be so generously hosted by thè Ambassador of Switzerland... It is a hard act to come after my mother, in many senses, but she has entrusted thè reins of TASIS to my hands. No small challenge. As I said to our faculty in thè fall, there is little significance in thè present and prudent hope for thè future unless one looks at thè past, rooted as we are in an honorable, industrious heritage. As we set our sights on thè 21st century, it is important to look back across thè 20th century to find and reconnect with our moorings. It is in strengthening our ties with what is best in our past that we can best be prepared to face thè future. Mrs. Fleming founded TASIS on thè traditional values and standards on which she was herself nourished by her educator parents, and to which for over 65 years she has given person­ al, vivid, eloquent, and elegant expression. The contemplative and thè active dimensions of life must both be cultivated; thè mind, thè spirit, and thè body need proper development. For many hundreds of years such efforts have formed thè basis for Western Civilization and their noble products visibly surround thè TASIS schools. In their light Mrs. Fleming has always emphasized "beauty” and “duty” in her schools - even in their very settings, buildings, furnishings, ceremonies, and social style. In our Schools thè devotion to beauty and duty should be particularly prominent as bases for educating our young people. Joining them together is a major part of thè formation and vision of M. Crist Fleming and of a TASIS education: thè belief that courtesy and excellence are both important because “manners are minor morals”; that “noblesse oblige”. TASIS started with a handful of students, a band of pioneers caught up in thè vision of my mother. Over thè last 45 years many thousands of students have been touched by thè magic of this vision. Now our richly international com­ munity brings students together from around thè world in a common endeavor - in a fervent attempt - to prepare them to be decent, thoughtful, skillful, and compassionate citizens

of thè world as well as of their separate nations. We hope our students come to understand, appreciate, and respect thè universally good qualities as well as thè bountiful variety of customs that can be found in thè several cultures that make up our community. This is an exceptionally important experience for our students to have so that they are prepared to live in a “global village”.

Daughter Lynn and Mrs. Fleming, looking on to thè future...

I am committed to carrying on thè legacy I have inherited from my educator grandparents and from my mother. I consider it a tremendous opportunity and challenge. I am ambitious for TASIS and I have high hopes and plans for what I want to accomplish before I, in turn, pass on thè baton. I wouldn’t be my mother’s daughter if I didn’t have big dreams and thè commitment to work hard to realize them. After all, I grew up with thè attitude that nothing is impossible, it just may take a little longer! So, I have set my sights high on behalf of TASIS. The day I started full time as thè Executive Director three years ago, I started working with a very gifted classical architect, David Mayernik, who has since developed beautiful master plans for our campuses both in Switzerland and in England. The magnifìcent new Palestra sports complex, thè fìrst phase of thè TASIS Global Village project in Lugano, was completed last year. It is a tremendous addition to our facili-

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Written in thè front of my grandmother’s Bible are thè words: “I am only one; but I am one; I cannot do everything, but I can do something. What I can do I ought to do; and what I ought to do by thè grace of God I will do.”... I was very pleased to hear thè same words quoted at our recent TASIS Commencement by our distinguished guest speaker - and cosmopolitan Swiss - Dr. Cornelio Sommaruga, President of thè International Red Cross.

Mrs. Fleming passes thè baton to daugter Lynn

ties... The next phase and challenge will be to build a new library/dormitory that will enable us to convert thè old library into much-needed classrooms. In thè meantime, a tremendous opportunity presented itself when a property my mother has been eyeing for 40 years carne available. To prevent thè subdivision of thè property next to our campus into 10 house lots, we took a calculated risk - let’s remember, that’s how my mother started and built TASIS! - thè calculated risk of signing a deferred-purchase contract to buy this beautiful land and villa, a naturai addition to our campus that will increase thè school proper­ ty by more than 40%. We have two years to raise thè 2 and 1/2 million dollars to complete thè purchase. The challenge is on for all of us... We are also very excited about our newlydeveloped Master Pian for TASIS England . This school has grown so rapidly and is full to overflowing. We now need to step back and pian for thè long term, seeking to improve our facilities for our present full capacity. We pian to break ground on thè first phase - a classroom building and an office building - next year. I, with thè wonderful, dedicated TASIS team, have plenty of challenges ahead to realize these Master Plans before I retire, a word my mother didn’t realize existed! We are always striving to evaluate and improve what we do, not just with thè physical facilities, but also with thè quality of our programs, winter and summer. We are

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not only working to make our campuses thè most beautiful of any school in Europe, but, more importantly, to educate and prepare our students, those who bring thè campuses alive, to become defenders and ambassadors for thè good - for virtue - wherever their paths take them. There is need all around us. My most heartfelt hope is that each of our students will make a difference for thè better in each of their communities.

My mother set up thè TASIS Foundation to perpetuate her vision, a rather traditional educa­ tional vision to which she has given unique inspirational expression and unique international scope. She has placed thè entire campus and management of The American School in Switzerland in a non-profìt Swiss educational foundation. We fìnally have thè structure now to receive large tax-deductible donations. We decided to launch major fundraising to support our expansion and building plans. The School cannot build all that we need to build and develop all of thè programs we would like to develop solely with its own resources. We need thè strong support of generous TASIS alumni and friends. With all of thè talented and loyal people at TASIS, many of whom are here gathered, thè vision will go on. We count on you thè alumni to give your continued support in small and large ways to ensure that thè TASIS schools will remain strong and improve, and that our stu­ dents and alumni will flourish far into thè future, well prepared to make a difference. Please return to your alma mater this summer! You are all invited to celebrate my mother”s 90th birthday in Lugano August 18-20. It will be a memorable occasion with an originai musi­ cal based on my mother’s life and a history of TASIS film, along with much good company in a magnificant setting - Switzerland! I look forward to seeing many of you there.


N I N E T I E S

The Senior Classes of 2000, Switzerland and England, congratulate you, Mrs. Fleming, for creating and giving us TASIS TASIS Switzerland Class of 2000

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In appreciation and devotion to thè most remarkable mother, I dedicate this volume to MCF - What a Life, What a Woman, What a Mother! God bless you always. Copyright © 1990 Lynn Fleming Aeschliman, Editor Designed by Rick Bickhart Typesetting by E.M. Typesetting Originai printing by Kaminer & Thomson, Ine Charlottesville, Virginia © 2000 Lynn Fleming Aeschliman, Editor Reprinted with Addendum by Tipografìa Grafica Bellinzona SA Claro, Switzerland


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MCF—WHAT A LIFE!





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