Philip Bertenthal '68
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- Alenka FigaAlenka: Ready.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: My name is Phil Bertenthal, currently live in Los Angeles, California, and I’m a member of the Grinnell College class of 1968. The first time I ever came to Grinnell was as a freshman. I had never visited the college, never interviewed with anybody from the college, did everything by written application, and other than a magazine article in Life magazine in 1960, I didn’t know almost anything about Grinnell, other than it was a good, small college.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I arrived with a cousin of mine who I had never met before that day. We flew to Chicago and then hopped on a train, and- I don’t know how we got from the airport to the train; I just don’t remember that part. And we took the Rock Island line into Grinnell. Just wanna look at the yearbook- thing- I remember arriving on the Rock Island line, and then a bus took me to my dorm, and a guy in the dorms saw me and knew my name because he had memorized the names of all the freshman in our dorm and said, “Hi Phil, how are you?” and I went up to my dorm.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So that’s my first memory of the campus. So, I thought everybody was really friendly, I mean, somebody I didn’t know knew my name and that was kind cool, and then I met my roommates. There was another New Yorker in my room and a kid from Des Moines, with his- with a blazer and a tie, which nobody else was wearing a blazer and a tie. And I said, “This guy is kind of different than me.” He wound up becoming my roommate for three years and we’re still pretty good friends. So, that was kind of my first memory of Grinnell.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: Grinnell, for me, was not very much of an academic place. I did not have the best class attendance or the best grades. I was lucky as a child, being smart, and I was able to really skate through in many ways academically, and spent much of my time on other activities at Grinnell. I was primarily involved in Student Government my last two years.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: But other than that I really spent my time just kind of learning about things and talking to people. I would stay up all night, ‘till maybe three, four, five, six o’clock in the morning, fall asleep before breakfast, and wake up after lunch. And then just getting back in my routine, I played a lot of bridge in the Forum, in the room between the.... Grill and the North Lounge, and then- until I got involved, like I say, in the student government my last two years, here....
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: My f-Alenka: Oh, sorry.Phil: Yeah, you go ahead.Alenka: I was going to ask: so what was Student Government like in 196...8?Phil: Well it was interesting, because one- Actually, let me back up and talk about what was happening at Grinnell at the time, and then I’ll go back into Student Government. One of the things that was interesting about our time at Grinnell is, kind of the split between some of the lives we lived, which were back in the fifties, and also being- getting involved in the sixties and seventies. So, when I arrived at Grinnell, I arrived- The dorm I lived in… There was a student-wide election across campus for the fall election, and there were three dorms that voted for Goldwater, including the dorm that I was in. So that was kind of interesting.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I.. I was just kind of surprised, but the life in the dorms, the men’s dorms, was incredibly fraternity-like: lots of hazing, lots of drinking, a lot of partying... Lots of not being nice to people who were different, and that continued throughout my four years there, slowly dropping. There was one event that had been a major Grinnell event for like 100 years that got eliminated my freshman year because the year before the men were so unruly, and so men’s hall life was kind of, really wild, out of control, and very much non-political.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: What was – I guess, depending on if you’re comfortable saying – what was the event that was banned?Phil: It was called the Boar’s Head Dinner.Alenka: Okay.Phil: And it was a big dinner that they had, a formal dinner, just before Christmas vacation, with the members of the Board of Trustees, I think, came in. And everyone was supposed to be formal. I don’t know exactly what was going on because I just heard- remember the stories, but if you hear anybody who is here from the class of ’67 or ’66, the Boar’s Head Dinner was the first thing that got eliminated, that we could- that happened.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Every spring we had a thing called Spring Riot, which was unofficially sanctioned by the administration where outgoing Student Government, which was no longer in power because it was after spring break, would kidnap the incoming Student Government and take them to the College’s campus, a cabin at Rock Creek. And all the electricity would be turned off on campus and there would just be parties going along.Alenka: Wow.Phil: Spring Riot got eliminated after somebody threw a burning couch out the window. So!
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So that all was happening at Grinnell. At the same time, there was all this political consciousness going on. So it was really very strange. We became very much anti-war activists, so it was almost strange kind of being, on one hand, being in this kind of, y'know, late-fifties, early sixties, kind of, almost Animal House existence on North Campus, and this really serious, political stuff going on, primarily anti-war stuff but other things as well and people really serious about it and really concerned about it. And it was just really interesting.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: When I came as a freshman I don’t think there was almost any drugs on campus, except…Alenka: Very different now.Phil: Oh yeah. No, it was very different by the time I graduated, you know? So, you know, freshman year, if there was any marijuana on campus I didn’t know about it. I heard afterwards there was, Langan basement, there was lots of marijuana, 'cause that was the... situation.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: But there was... you know, by my sophomore year there was a lot of- that started, more my junior year. A number of folks went out to San Francisco for the summer of 1967 and I remember they brought back lots of LSD. There was lots of LSD on campus. So there's- by the time I graduated it was weird because the freshman were coming in very very drug savvy; even more drug savvy than we were because we were isolated in Iowa. So the freshman and sophomores were even more drug savvy than the juniors and seniors were during those years. ‘Cause when we got to Grinnell there was, firstly, no drugs. There was a lot of drinking, but not a lot of drugs. So that was kind of...
- Phil BertenthalPhil: The other thing about dorm life was when we got here, women had hours. Freshman women had to be in by 10:30 during the week and midnight on weekends. Freshman men could stay out all night from the very first time they arrived on campus. Yeah, one of my early memories was going to the Dixie Diner which was on 6th just on the other side of Park Street.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Because, at that time.. Well, the- Highway 6 was the main east-west road in the United States, and a month after- We would go there at 4:00 in the morning and get these wonderfully homemade sweet rolls just fresh from the oven, which the women never got to eat. But then they opened up Interstate 80 about two mon- some time in that first semester.Alenka: Wow.Phil: And all the business along Highway 6 died. And The Dixie was out of business by the end of my first semester, my freshman year, 'cause all the truck traffic went south to 80.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: So, where was I?Alenka: Ah, You were gonna talk about the Student Government?Phil: Oh the Student Government! So basically- so what happened was, so Student Government was in charge of enforcing what was happening on campus. And Student Government had two parts. It was the halls, which were, North campus was all men, you had the men’s house, and the women’s campus. And those structures were in charge of keeping rules in order within the halls, and then there was the Student Senate which dealt with campus-wide issues.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: And so it was more.. so the house- and there was a lot of self-governance, but only to the extent that the students got to enforce the rules, but the administration made the rules. So, it was all- no, well, things were very restricted. There was… women were not allowed- you couldn't have a member of the opposite sex in your room except on Sunday afternoons between 2 and 5, and only if the door was opened at least the width of a towel and at least three feet were on the floor at all times.Alenka: Haha!Phil: And they were- these were actually enforced, to a certain extent.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: So, Student Government- so part of Student Government dealt with just enforcing the rules that nobody believed in. The best places to live became the basements because the basements were easily accessible. You can get people in and out of your room with the fewest people seeing you, so those became the prime rooms which I’m sure now, basements are probably no longer prime rooms because you can have anybody in your room whenever you want.Alenka: Yeah.Phil: But, the basements were always the wildest places in each dorm.Alenka: Yeah.Phil: Plus, other things that were not part of the main thing, like Smith Annex was a wild place. Why? Because Smith Annex was away from the rest of Smith, so there was nobody over there enforcing rules, so...
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So that’s- So, one of the things we did with Student Government, my senior year I was speaker of the Student Senate and I was on the group, we got rid of... I mean, the administration, senior year- Let's see, sophomore year they got rid of freshman women’s hours. So, they had the same hours as all other women, which I think was midnight all the time, maybe one AM. I think midnight.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So senior year, they eliminated women’s hours. The loggia, which was locked at midnight, became unlocked all the time. In part becau- It was locked from the inside, but what happened was students got a very clever thing, they filed a fire department complaint, and the fire department found that it was a fire hazard, having the women locked in, so that’s how they got the loggia opened at night, the women’s loggia open.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: But one of the things which happened was, and for years I thought it was us, that the students had demanded, came up with this idea. “We want to integrate the campus, have co-ed dorms.” And while there was a lot of support amongst some of the students, really the push for that actually came from the administration.Alenka: Oh?Phil: Because they had to deal with the North campus problem.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: And that was the hazing?Phil: The hazing. I mean, junior year, Cowles was the worst that year. They were really hazing one of the- one of the persons here was of very very limited vision. They used to call him the bat and really give him all kinds of hard time, just really not nice things, and they were brought up on charges and the men’s court actually expelled one student but suspended one or two more, I think, and put several on probation including a person who became a prominent member of the Reagan administration.Alenka: Wow.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So... But, so there was getting to be the feeling among the students, I guess, as we were becoming more sophisticated and more political, that really what was happening was not any good. But, the administration really didn’t like it, liked it far less than we did, and so, when the idea came up I think it was as much an administration idea as much as a student idea, and it was actually opposed, probably... The biggest opposition to it probably came from the men on North campus. Because you were gonna break up our way of life, our hall.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I mean, I lived in North Younker and I got driven back from the airport by two women who recently graduated. They said, “Oh, we lived in Younker.” And I said, “You lived in Younkers? Did you live in South Younker or North Younker?” because those were two different worlds, they were two different cultures, two different groups of people. And somebody was from South Younker or North Younker, nobody was from Younkers. And so, the whole idea that- y'know, that’s, like a big big change. So that’s one of the things we did, is we worked on the changes in the- in terms of the residence hall, worked on the plans to integrate. And from- I’ve talked to folks from ’69 and ’70 who were here afterwards and they said that the changeover actually went very very smoothly, and..
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Though it’s interesting, my understanding is, not having been a student here since, is that North campus still retains a little bit more of its character over 45 years after the campuses were integrated.Alenka: It does but, that stigma, that idea is actually tied to the athletics, now.Phil: Right, but it was the jocks! It may be tied to athletics and it may become unisexual, but it was still - it was basically North campus is more like North campus and South campus is more like South campus.Alenka: The dirty south.Phil: Yes, yeah. And y'know, it was just interesting how this changed in 1969. That’s over 40 years ago- over 50- yeah, over 40 years ago, and it hasn’t... and it’s still retaining stuff. So that’s kind of the cool thing about Grinnell, in some ways, that it stays a lot the same over the years, so..
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: Oh, just- I have a quick question. So, the hazing culture that was here in the early sixties- right? Was that tied to athletics, or was that just like-?Phil: No, it was mainly in each of the dorms. I mean, each of the dorms had their own thing. I have my hall paddle that my hall son made for me, when I was a senior, he was a freshman. Y'know, there was mild hazing, you know, some of which, I’m looking back on, it’s not the proudest part of my time at Grinnell. Yeah, I was just not very nice, but fortunately I was not involved in any of the really, seriously bad stuff. But there were- y'know, it just got out of control. It really did, 'cause, you know, we were just- had sat around. We had nothing to- Y'know, there was nobody in control of us, and we just got- it just got worse and worse and worse over the years, so..
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: So in your time at Grinnell, how did the.. like, the level of power or authority that student government had change? Or did it?Phil: I don’t think it really did. I mean, we thought that it did, but in retrospect, y'know, we didn’t really have any real power. I think the power changed after we left. My understanding is that it was after we left, a year or two after we left, that basically the students just stopped enforcing the rules. Or, they made up their own rules and that was part of the integration of the campus; they got rid of all those rules.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: And part of it was, that we did- there was pressure though, to change the rules. I mean, there was a lot of pressure from the women students about women’s hours and the whole idea of it just being fundamentally not right. And, y'know- and somebody said, “I’ve seen this picture of the boys and the girls from that time. Y'know, it’s the boys who should’ve been locked up at night.” But, basically, the thing was, if you lock up the girls then the boys can’t get themselves in trouble kind of attitude.Alenka: Hm.Phil: But...
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: So what was your position in Student Government?Phil: I was the Speaker of the Student Senate, so, which I mean, I presided over the Senate meetings. We dealt with the budgets for the various agents, thing. The concerts program- what was really great back then because you could actually bring in top-quality entertainment to a student- or, to campus. I mean, we had the Jefferson Airplanes' first appearance outside of California was for Grinnell Homecoming.Alenka: Wow.Phil: We had Canonbo- Nina Simone, the Marvelettes, I don’t know if you’ve heard of the Marvelettes.Alenka: Wait, Nina Simone came here?Phil: Yeah.Alenka: Serio- Ugh. I’m too young. Okay, sorry, let's keep going.Phil: No, no- and so we had all of that, y'know, and so we had a budget where we could bring in people like that.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: The Marvelettes which were a great Motown group did “Please Mr. Postman”-Alenka: Oh! Okay.Phil: And a bunch of other songs. They did homecoming one year. So you could do- bring in that kind of music. We had lots of great blues artists from Chicago would come in. Though, most of those guys are probably dead by now but they weren’t very expensive to bring in, I’m guessing. But we were able to do that. So that's- we had that kind of a budget. So that’s kind of what we did. I did some- then it became more political work. I worked on the McCarthy campaign. I was campus coordinator for McCarthy in ’68.Alenka: Oh, wow.Phil: And... so, it wasn’t like I was only not going to class and playing bridge. I was actually doing things.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: Were you involved in any like, protest movements, or anything sort of outside the realm of Grinnell politics?Phil: I was in very little. I don’t know why. It was very strange. I always found myself- I was just to the right of all the protestors. I mean I didn’t really get involved much in student protest until the 1969 Moratorium. I rememeber the '6- Back in New York, in October or November of ’69, I remember that, and then in 1970 when I was in law school we closed down the law school and went to DC, and ran into two Grinnell professors walking across the street as soon as I got to town.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: But, so... There wasn’t that much protest going on. There was a smaller group, and we did- Though, my senior year, the folks who were really political did some- probably, I don’t know if you’ve ever seen, this is one of the great pictures of all time. The Marine recruiters were coming on campus and there was a lot of violent reaction to Marine recruiters coming on campus. What they did here on Grinnell is, the field between ARH and the Forum – and the Forum at that time was the center of campus life.Alenka: Right.Phil: Everything happened through the Forum ‘cause you had to walk through the Forum no matter where you were going.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: On the cam- On this open field between ARH and the Forum they put small white crosses up the entire field with the names of all the men of the senior class on the crosses-Alenka: Oh, God.Phil: Before the Marine recruiters showed up. And the picture of that was just really powerful and was just really really- I mean, it was one of those pictures- one of the many pictures of Grinnell from that period of time that went around the world because it was so- it was just such a stunning photo.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: But I didn’t do very much political protest. I think, well, part of it was the- A lot of the direct protest really didn’t start until after, I think, the Chicago convention in 1968, the summer of ‘68. ‘Cause I think what happened was, until then people thought maybe we can pull it off and stuff. And you- working on the, y’know, if you’re working on the McCarthy campaign or the Bobby Kennedy campaign you think, " Okay, this is gonna do it. We’re gonna really change it." You know?
- Phil BertenthalPhil: And then, ‘68 was a hard year. First you had- Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and then you had- Bobby Kennedy was shot right after graduation. So, it was a really hard time, and I remember when Martin Luther King Jr was shot, the person we were scheduled to have on campus, John Lewis, who’s now a congressman from Georgia but at that time I think was head of the Student Non-violent Coordinating, was supposed to show up, I think that night or the next night and so that got canceled.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: And it was just- It was just a really hard time, especially, starting with our senior year in high school when Bobby Kenn- when John Kennedy was shot, to have to go through all that, to have all of these different inspirational leaders, you know, be killed. It really, I think, cut out a lot of- And I think the protest movement started really getting violent at that point, after 1968.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: Do you have any specific memories of, maybe, like, right after Martin Luther King Jr. was shot, or after Kennedy’s assassination?Phil: I remember after Bobby Kennedy’s, ’cause I remember, Babak Armajani- who is also in our class. He and I became friends. We were both managing opposing campaigns for student body president, and we became- after the election we became really really good friends and we’re still good friends though we never- we talk to each other mainly at reunions. And we were both- I remember, it was like two o’clock in the morning and I was watching, and I just got on the phone and I called Armi from New York to Minnesota just to kind of talk with him cause he was like, the person I thought I could most talk to about it and stuff, and...
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: I remember that. I remember after Martin Luther King Jr. was shot it was the first time I had ever been in Herrick chapel.Alenka: Oh. For the- was there a memorial?Phil: There was a memorial there and I went to Herrick Chapel. I was not that religious at the time, and I was not a Christian so the whole idea of going to a chapel just never crossed my mind before that.Alenka: So it did work..
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: I guess this is a tangent, but did Herrick have sort of more.. more of a religious affiliation? ‘Cause now I- we see it more as a venue for like, concerts and things like that.Phil: Well, I mean, I think there were chapel services every week, I think.Alenka: There might still be. I don't know.Phil: Yeah. I mean, I just don’t know. It was just not part of my existence at all. I mean, it just- I had never been in there before and I never went to chapel services in my four years here, and... y'know. Though, I remember working with the Chaplain, Chaplain Haas, on some issues. And I remember, I took a New Testament course from Burkle who was a religious studies major, but I don’t remember the chapel. The chapel is just not… I mean, I thought that’s what it was there for. There may have been other things happening there but I just don’t remember them.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: This is- I'm gonna pull from all over the place, sorry. You mentioned homecoming, and we don’t have a homecoming celebration or anything anymore. So, could you talk about that?Phil: Yeah, I mean homecoming was your classic homecoming. You had, y’know, we’d get some other school and it was, at the time the football stadium was Ward Field which is located right now, between where- if you go out the back side of the JRC it was right there and went across, parallel, next to the railroad tracks down towards Harris Theatre, and it was a small- The stadium was there and the football field was there.Alenka: So that's where- kind of where East campus is now?Phil: No no, on this side of the railroad tracks.Alenka: Oh! Okay.Phil: So Mac Field. It was between the railroad tracks and Mac Field.Alenka: Okay.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: The football stadium was there and, y'know, we had cheerleaders then, and we had a homecoming queen. It was very very classic, and then that Saturday night you had a dance in Darby and it was just like- y'know, if you go over and look at the '66 yearbook you can see the coronation of Laurie Houdek, the 1966 homecoming queen. And then right behind her is my good friend Laurie Hill who is one of the homecoming princesses, who was- I think she was a cheerleader. She may have been captain of the cheerleading team. She went from there to becoming-Alenka: We don’t have cheerleaders anymore.Phil: What? Well, not only that. Laurie herself went through a major transformation. She’s a major lesbian feminist activist and does psychology, dealing violence against women’s issues in- out in Berkley, California. And she’s just an absolutely wonderful person and she was then too, but I didn’t know her as well then, 'cause I met her when I was- more when I got out there.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So, but that’s what it was. It was just like any other, y’know... You had the homecoming dance. You had the homecoming event. They always had a cross country meet at the same time. It always would start before the football game, or during the football game, and then it would always end- the race would end- They would come back into the stadium- it always happened during halftime at the football game. Well, sometimes not, and sometimes the train would go through the campus during the football games and people would put signs on the train. But I mean, homecoming was... it was... it disappeared but I don’t think homecoming was- I don’t remember it as being an unusually rowdy event. It just seemed, it was kind of an old-fashioned kind of event, except we had modern music. Like I said, we had the Jefferson Airplane and the Marvelettes the last two years.
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: So would you say Grinnell was more typical, had more like, what you would expect out of a bigger university campus before…?Phil: No, I don’t think so. I mean, because, the same people who could be wild and crazy, y'know, up ‘til three o’clock in the morning doing all kinds of stupid things, would go into class the next day and have these really thoughtful discussions with their professors about all kinds of issues. I mean, there was a lot learning going on in the class. The classrooms, y'know, classrooms were exciting and dynamic. I was not one of the great participants in that but that's- I think I was more unusual in that. There was a lot-
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I mean, it was as academically focused as it is today. The students were- there was almost this weird dichotomy between what was happening, at least with many of the students, not all the students, ‘cause there were a lot of students, y'know, who didn’t partake in that. But, there was still a lot of that happening, but there was also a lot of serious scholarship going on. Y'know, we were getting a lot- y'know- The campus was not as focused and stuff- on all these national kinds of things that we have, but we had really excellent people doing all kinds of really, really incredible things, so..
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I think we were different and I think when we gr- y'know we... I mean, when we graduated we felt that we were different, and I know that those of us in the class of ’68 think that we're- not only do we think that Grinnellians are different but we think that the class of ’68 is different. We think that we somehow are the epitome of Grinnellians ‘cause we were there for the change. We fostered the campus through the change. Y'know?
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: I guess- Can you elaborate a little on what “the change” means? Or-Phil: I mean, well- The whole idea- I mean, it was like changing from the fifties to the sixties. I mean, to- y'know? You ever watch Ozzie and Harriet on TV?Alenka: Nuh-uh.Phil: Okay, Ozzie and Harriet- I mean, it was just like this all-American family with their two sons, and Leave it to Beaver, y'know-Alenka: Okay.Phil: Any of those shows. I mean-Alenka: Donna Reed?Phil: I mean, Donna Reed, exactly. It was- all of that, that’s kind of like the Grinnell that we arrived at, and when we left, it was completely different. I mean, it was so- You had a lot of the political stuff. Y'know, we had issues of- I mean the Vietnam War dominated while I was there but followed closely by women’s issues and issues of race.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: And I’m guessing issues of sexuality kind of came after that, but- y'know. 'Cause when I was there… now I realize who was gay, some of my friends who were gay. But back then, there was- nobody was out. Nobody was out at Grinnell then. And I don’t think it would’ve mattered, but it just wouldn’t happen. You know, it probably would have mattered 'cause people still would've been- Just because this culture of giving people a hard time, and I think- I don’t think it would have been because they’re gay, but just because they’re different we can give them a hard time. It wasn't quite focused on- It was focused on anybody who’s different because it’s fun, and makes us laugh. Rather than thinking about it, "Yeah, it makes you laugh but it’s really horrible things to do to people," and we just didn’t see that.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Just a couple other things. I used to play a lot of bridge. One of the people I used to play bridge with a lot was a classics professor by the name of John Crossett.Alenka: Okay.Phil: John Crossett was, like, from another generation removed. I mean, very very traditional. Very very precise, very very professional. You always called him Mr. Crossett and he would call you Mr. Bertenthal. And he was, even though you were playing bridge with him every night it was always this way.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: He actually wound up marrying a woman from our class.Alenka: Haha. Very professional.Phil: There was at least two or three professors that married students while I was here. It was not unusual.Alenka: Huh.Phil: And it was not unacceptable, and I learned today that one of the professors who wound up marrying a student asked the school, before he came in he says, “Look, I’m a single man. I’m gonna be in the middle-of-nowhere Iowa. What is your policy on dating students?” and they said it was OK, y'know, within a certain framework.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: And today, I mean, I'm-Alenka: That actually did happen recently and it was not OK, so..Phil: Right, right. i mean, it was. I mean, it was- So, the- He was- he would always call her Miss Wallace even though it was pretty clear that they had a romantic relationship, but I think that he always kept it above board privately as well as publicly. He was just that kind of guy. He was my freshman class advisor and he was a very conservative person. He was smart as can be, and we would have discussions while playing bridge.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: And he would challenge me, and you know, when I started looking at the question, "Who’s the professor or staff member who influenced you, most?" I realized that as I thought about it, I had thought it was my major stuff but it wasn’t- it was John Crossett, 'cause to argue with him is, I had to be really on my game. I had to know my fact, I had to know my stuff, I couldn’t be sloppy. And if you hang around with only people who think like you, you starting thinking sloppily, because everybody agrees with you and you don’t attack things critically. And John Crossett just forced me to- y'know, pushed me to the wall on my issues. Whatever it was we were talking about, doesn’t matter, politics, anything, he would always force me, and just tighten my mind up in a way that really helped me later on both in terms of all different things, including the practice of law which I wound up doing, because he was just so there.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: So that was- that was kind of interesting because you know, you think of Grinnell as this great progressive institution with this history of- all this history and to have my most influential professor be probably both a conservative person and a conservative, politically, person, being the person that influenced me the most I think says something about the school, and I think the school- It’s because the school respects scholarship and thought, and there was a lot, and John Crossett was just really, really good at that and a lot of people didn’t like him, because- But, I did. I mean, well, probably because I played bridge with him and he was my advisor, both. It was just coincidence both happened. And it was just- it was an interesting- an interesting time.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: My favorite place on campus was the Forum. The Forum was the center of everything. I mean, I really- It’s too bad that it is such a physically bad building. ‘Cause it does- I mean, all those little steps up and down. But I mean, if you’re on South Campus, you’re coming to class, you have to go through the forum. You’re on North Campus, you’re going to the library, you have to go there. Y'know, everything was here, because nothing happened on the other side. I don’t even know what the name of that street is.Alenka: East Street?Phil: No, no, the one that goes this way here. The one between Younkers and ARH. I don’t even know the name of it… it’s probably got a number, but I don't know what the-Alenka: Seventh. I know that's Seventh Ave.Phil: Seventh? Is that Seventh? I don’t even know what it is.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: But, the only thing that happened north of Seventh for me is I would sleep and eat, ‘cause I ate at Cowles, y'know. 'Cause that was the other thing, men ate at Cowles and women ate at the Quad. So they- not only did you not live with women, men and women didn’t live together, they didn’t eat together. So, there was a lot- the integration of the campus really changed the socialization of the campus in terms of meals.Alenka: Oh, it’s Eighth, I'm sorry. It’s not Seventh, it’s Eighth Ave. The one that crosses campus.Phil: Oh, yeah, yeah. Okay. That- it doesn’t matter- it's not- It doesn't matter to the Oral History! I mean, what’s more important to the Oral History is I have no idea what it is.Alenka: Heheh, yeah.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: Let me just- Other things that happened here too? One thing that.... How Grinnell has- Grinnell- a couple things have changed… First of all, the nice thing about Grinnell is, I think there’s something that’s consistent about all of us. About three years ago, I got an email from a woman who said, “I’ve recently graduated from Grinnell. I’m living in Chicago. I’m thinking of mov- relocating to LA. I’m interested in doing some progressive political work. I was wondering if I can meet you when I come out to see.” For some reason I just said, “Oh, yup! Come on in.” So she came by, and we talked, and we just got along really well. Turns out, she had done an internship at an organization in Chicago which I had been friendly with... the former director who’s there, emeritus… and we just had a bunch of different things in common, and she wound up moving to LA.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: My wife got her- put her in touch with an organization my wife was on the board of, and we became really good friends, and then another friend of hers from the class of 2008, and we- a woman from the class of 1973 who’s our Grinnell-in-LA person, and the four- and maybe one or two other people, we’d go out together and do planning events, and we just got along great, and there was something about our shared Grinnell experience from ’68 to 2008 that was really incredible.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: And one of my big goals is to kind of work on more of Grinnell being a life-long... That you, when you start at Grinnell, but after you graduate, not only do you have an ongoing obligation to the College and to the students, to the College, and even to the current students, but also that the College has an obligation to you in terms of both- in terms of y'know, teaching you and stuff, and so that you should be part of that community for the rest of your life.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: I think some of that is actually there, but I don’t think we really focus on it. That’s kind of like my big goal and stuff. Especially- and it just happened when I realized how much I liked these folks in the class of 2008. Then I started meeting other folks in 2008 because they’re all friends with each other, and I didn’t know- And so it was just interesting talking to them and, plus it was fun ‘cause I get to tell them the same stories that I told you right now and they think, they say, “Oh really?!” Y'know, it’s always fun to find out those things. So, I mean, if you’re enjoying it at all, you gotta- They enjoyed listening to me, whatever. So that was a really kind of cool thing about Grinnell, which is..
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: And the oth- I mean, whenever I come back from reunion I always meet somebody from my class that I never talked to before.Alenka: Oh really? That's really interesting.Phil: And I say, “Wow. Why didn’t I ever know this person? This person is great.” And every reunion I think I’ve done, I’ve added a new friend from Grinnell, at a Reunion, from my year. Y’know it’s one thing, y'know, sometimes you run into somebody from another year. You happen to eat the same table with or something, but every year from my year of graduation.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Because you just don't get to- You think you know everybody on campus and it’s small, but you really don’t, and we were more isolated then because I didn’t know men who didn’t live in North Younker very well.Alenka: Mhm.Phil: And I didn’t know women who weren't dating men that I knew, or who were not in my major, or who were not involved in Student Government, because I just would not run into them. 'Cause, you know, it’s not like coming down, you’re sitting down casually at dinner and you happen to be at a table with somebody. But no, I always sat with the guys from North Younker, the same- y'know. And we had sit-down dinners where we had to wear coats and ties, and they’d ring a bell and you’d head over there to campus. It was a different world, so..
- Alenka Figa & Phil BertenthalAlenka: Can I ask- so, the way Student Government was structured- like, I know it didn't have as much influence as it did now, but it also sounds like it had a really different structure than it does today?Phil: It had- Basically we had- we had the Council of House Presidents.Alenka: Okay.Phil: Okay? Okay, and that was in charge of the men’s campus. Each dorm- each hall had its own president elected by the members of their hall.Alenka: Right, and then the women’s side had like a…?Phil: They had the Association of Women’s Students, and they elected their house presidents at large because the women changed halls every year, so it was the top… whatever, Loose, Read, Haines, James, Cleveland, Main, Mears. They would elect the top seven.Alenka: Oh, Mears was still a dorm!Phil: Yeah, yeah. Mears was a dorm, yeah.Alenka: Mears is the English department now.Phil: Yeah, Mears was the non-smoking dorm.Alenka: Oh.
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: There was a lot of smoking on campus. Cigarettes.Alenka: Yeah. Before...Phil: I mean- and there was a lot of disrespect for like, the dorms. I mean, when you finished flicking- finish using a cigarette, you’d flick it out the door onto the floor in the hallway and just let it burn out on the linoleum. So the linoleum floors on the men’s campus were just covered with cigarette burns all the way around, so..Alenka: Oh.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: But... And I don’t know how the structure- inside the women’s halls they had a different thing. In the men’s halls we had different people in charge of different things. The College didn’t provide anything in the halls, so, for example, I remember we had a big- One of the things was, we're raising money so we could buy a TV set, and North and South Younker decided, “Ah, we're gonna raise- we’ll buy- we'll divide up North lounge and…” There were two lounges at that time in the basement of Younkers. I don’t think that they’re there anymore. I think they put in computers, or something.
- Phil BertenthalPhil: But, we had the North Lounge- the North Younker, said “OK we’re gonna make North Younker Lounge into the TV, the tube room,” and we basically all chipped in and bought a color TV. And there was only like two or three color TVs on campus. And then in South, then we said “Okay, then we'll use the other room- people can study in there and they can watch TV here.” So we did that. We did hall parties. We organized parties. We used to take- charter a bus once a year and go to the Amanas for a hall dinner. So that's what- So that’s kind of what the government on the men’s campus was. I don’t know what the overall grouping did, but they were mainly- the house presidents were basically in charge of enforcing the rules, y'know?
- Phil BertenthalPhil: Y’know House Mother system most of the time I was there. All the women’s dorms and most of the men’s dorms had House Mothers, who lived in, kind of the suites, but I think they're where now the President’s suites, the House Mothers lived there. These were older, retired women who lived there and their job was to kind of look out for us, y'know, in the old, old way, and it was- Which didn’t really- They didn’t really do much of anything really, ‘cause there was not- and my last year they switched over to a system- They got rid of all the House Mothers and started adding Resident Advisors, and I don't know what they- and...
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: But, so that was part of the Stud- Then the other part of Student Government was Student Government Association. Each hall elected two senators.Alenka: Oh? That sounds familiar.Phil: And then all the Senators would go and they would be in charge of legislation. I don’t know what all the- I mean, I’m trying to remember all the things. I mean, the things I remember is dealing with the concerts issue and y'know, those- appointing the Concerts Committee, dealing with the budgets, budgets for clubs and various things. We didn’t have a heck of a lot of money back then, but the Concert’s part was maybe $5,000. And, y'know, and we were able to bring in Jefferson Airplane, so....Alenka: Yeah.Phil: So....Alenka: Yep!
- Phil Bertenthal & Alenka FigaPhil: Anf the other thing was just all the cool people that came to campus, you know? We had, Dwight Eisenhower came to campus, Martin Luther King Jr. Just, all kinds of senators. I mean, we had one weekend senior year, same week that Martin Luther King Jr. came in, like 25 or 30 leading Americans, artists, writers, commentators all came, so there was a lot of stuff there. There was a lot of things happening on campus that kind of kept you busy, so...Alenka: Yeah. That sounds good.Phil: Okay. So I think that covers a lot.Alenka: Yeah.Phil: That’s my experiences at Grinnell, and I loved it, so...Alenka: That's great. Well, thank you so much.Phil: You're welcome, so..Alenka: My pleasure.
Alumni oral history interview with Philip Bertenthal '68. Recorded June 1, 2012.