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Random Thoughts
NECC Professor, Mark Palermo

It was the only semester I ever lived in a dormitory, and I learned lessons about how the real world works.

It was 1970. I was 20, and I wanted to get out of Lawrence. I don’t know how I picked the godforsaken place, but I ended up in a college in rural southwestern New Hampshire. Those were the days before business expansion into the area. The region was mired in Appalachian style poverty - with people living in rusted out trailers and run down farms. And the resultant sparse contact with the outside world, combined with the constantly overcast weather exacerbated the sense of isolation of the place - which could be overwhelming at times.

One day in the student union, I was talk-ing with two friends from Massachusetts a-bout poverty. We decided that instead of mere talk, we should actually do something about poverty. We decided to start a collect-ion for the poor of the area. We talked to people, and before long the news spread a-round campus. A meeting was held. Word spread more, and donations came in. There was publicity, and more meetings. Our po-verty collection became a movement, and even more people joined, some sincere and others motivated by status seeking and crass opportunism.

The power of our movement was growing, as if we had started a pebble rolling down a mountainside which became a landslide. But a delicate psychological balance was breached - and control was slipping out of our hands. We original three longhaired guys morphed into subcommittees and semi-committees with everybody doing their own thing.

Somebody talked to the manager of the school cafeteria, and made an arrangement. If boarding students wished, they could sign a waiver agreeing not to eat in the cafeteria on a certain day. When a few hundred students signed the waiver, the manager contributed the difference to the poverty fund. My friends and I also signed the waiv-er, and we decided that later that day we would make supper in the dorm room. Mean-while we weren’t aware - or if we were, we didn’t care - that another committee across campus was pushing the idea that students should not only sign the waiver, but should also fast that entire day - in order to raise consciousness about hunger and suffering. My friends and I neither proposed that idea nor were consulted, and felt no need to go along with it. The night of the fast, we cooked in the dorm room. We failed to consider the odor of roast pork with onions and gravy permeating the dorm building where stu-dents were suffering hunger. Let’s just say that it aroused deep resentment, magnified by the narrow minded provincialism of the place, which had already made them sus-picious of “outsiders.” So without having done anything wrong, our stock fell. Vague rumors circulated about mismanagement of funds, malfeasance - false, of course, but could those “Massholes” be involved? I learned that avoiding the appearance of impropriety is almost as important as avoiding the actual impropriety. 

But other lessons were yet to come. Eventually the collection phase ended, and a power struggle ensued among the various factions. Moreover, we had forgotten to ask the most basic question: Whom do we distribute the funds to? You can’t simply go around door to door and say “Hi, I see by the wretched house you live in that you’re poor. Here’s some money.” The folks in those old hollows were proud Yankee stock, and would probably have starved to death before accepting our money. We had neither thought to ask them what they needed, nor knew how to ask them. We were from another planet.

Then I learned about politics in the last week of the semester. The fund was a political football, and still in play. While students and faculty were distracted with finals and leaving for the summer, the chairman of one of the committees - claiming legitimacy - passed a resolution of his group to hire two people to work through the summer to “research” the question of disbursement. When we investigated, we discovered that the two people hired would be the very same chairman of the committee and his girlfriend - and their salaries would consume the entire fund - in today’s dollars about $20,000.

The three of us went to the dean; a young, hip guy in his thirties, and we told him everything. The next day, he banned all committees and seized control of the fund. He contacted an old man from the village church and asked him straight out what they needed. The old man distributed the money to the poor and elderly.

Vilified, despite the noblest of intentions; loveless, despite a surplus of women on campus; shunned, but more experienced in the world; we three longhairs left after that one semester having learned that it’s not always easy to help people … but you should try anyway.   Mark Palermo is a professor at Northern Essex Community  College in Haverhill and is the past vice-president of the faculty union. You can email him at  markpalermo@lycos.com.

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