TRANSCRIPT
INTERVIEWEE: Ruth
Lofgren (RL)
INTERVIEWERS: David Todd (DT) and David Weisman (DW)
DATE: February 14, 2006
LOCATION: San Antonio Texas
TRANSCRIBERS: Melanie Smith and Robin Johnson
REELS: 2328 and 2329

Please see the Real
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of reel
2328 and
2329 from our full interview with Dr.
Lofgren. Please note
that the recording
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and sound tone for
technical settings at the outset of the recordings.
Note: boldfaced
numbers refer to time codes for the VHS tape copy of the interview.
"Misc." refers to various off-camera conversation or background noise,
unrelated to the interview.
DT: My name’s David
Todd. I’m here the Conservation History Association of Texas.
It’s February 14th, 2006 and we are in San Antonio at the
home of Ruth Lofgren and we’re going to have the good chance to visit
with her about her interest and training in microbiology and in science,
in general, and science education and in the creation of a wonderful
preserve and educational program at Mitchell Lake and many other things
that she’s done for the conservation effort here in San Antonio.
And I wanted to thank her for taking time to talk to us. I thought
we might start by talking about your childhood and I understood that you
grew up in Utah during the Depression and I was curious if you can tell
us if there are any incidents or people, mentors in your early life that
might have introduced you to the natural world and a curiosity and love
of it. Anything come to mind?
00:02:36 - 2328
RL: Oh, I think I
was one of those lucky people that was born feeling that the natural
world was my world. When I was a tiny child, probably a year, year
and a half old, we had a big rainstorm up in this mountain town in
Utah—Huntsville, where I was born—and after the rainstorm, there was a
beautiful rainbow and I went out into the yard—and my parents tell
me—raised my arms in the sky and I said thank you, thank you because
00:03:13 - 2328
this was my rainbow and I knew that the whole thing
was—the whole of the planet was my—my special world to live in.
And my parents were very supportive of my exploring and did the best
they could in identifying the beautiful little buttercups in the marsh
behind the house. And then as my little brother and a little
sister came along, we were a nice little family that loved exploring
nature. And my father went on a Mormon mission up to the Northwest
and my parents had decided that it would be better if my mother, with
the three little children, moved down to Salt Lake City. So we
lived with my
00:04:18 - 2328
grandparents, my mother’s parents, and—while my
father was away. And then we moved out to a suburb of Salt Lake, a
little town, Butlerville, at the foot of Big Cottonwood Canyon, where we
had a 20 acre orchard and 6 acres around the house and a wonderful
opportunity for just playing in the oak brush and the sand dunes.
So the natural world was part of who I was as a child.
DT: I think you told
me earlier that not only were you enjoying the natural, but you were
curious and kind of fearless about it. That there was a story when
you were, what, 18 months old about your exploring a little bit?
Can you tell about that?
00:05:14 - 2328
RL: Yes, there—the
marsh behind the house up in Huntsville had what looked like
stepping-stones to me. They were little hummocks of grass out into
the mud. And I had walked out, step by step, until I was, oh, few
hundred feet out into the marsh and, of course, these hummocks wouldn’t
support an adult. So when my parents saw that I was out there, my
father talked me back to step on this one and this one and this one.
He talked me all the way back to sound—or—or firm soil. And never
any scolding or terror
00:05:58 - 2328
or anything, they just said—took it for granted
that I would be able to follow directions and—and come back safely.
But it all seemed like a perfectly natural part of my playground.
DT: I think you’d
also mentioned once that, I’m not sure which stage in your early years
this was, but that each of you and your siblings had a garden. And
I though that was a such a wonderful kind of a little production for
each of you to have, something to tend and grow and raise. Can you
tell about that?
00:06:41 - 2328
RL: Well, we had
general chores so that when my father pruned the orchard, we would all
haul the prunings and then have a big bonfire. But around the
house, we had six acres that we could d—divide up among us and all five
of us had gardens. My section was between the front door and the
mailbox that was out at the street. And it—it ran down along the
side of the h—driveway. I had iris planted between the path and
the driveway and the—roses, some of them were moss roses along the
hillside that went up on the east side of the path. My parents had
been irrigating from the beginning of my life on the
00:07:40 - 2328
property that they’d had, so I knew about building
an irrigation ditch along the iris bed, but it was much more sensible to
water the roses one at a time. And so, it—it—when we—our water
turn came, I could run the water down by the iris bed and they always
grew consistently and beautifully with so much sunshine and hot, dry
weather.
DT: You mentioned
your father and I understand that he was a water master in Utah and also
an inventor of some water measurement devices and I gather was very
conscious of life in the desert and how precious water could be.
Can you talk a little bit about his…?
00:08:31 - 2328
RL: My father had a
civil engineering degree from the University of Utah and had been also
educated to be a teacher. That he was a civil engineer who came
into this little town and the people there felt so dependent upon the
water, irrigation that they had coming out of Big Cottonwood Canyon.
But they trusted him completely because he knew math and he—he knew
engineering. So he was the water master that divided up the amount
of water that they had. So that he’d divide the amount of time
that each person got this stream that was flowing out of the canyon.
And then he also recognized that it takes water time to run from one
person’s gate to the next person’s gate. So he—they had running
time and then they had their water turn, and then running time and water
turn. And the people were very appreciative of his skill at doing
this and trusted him. He also recognized that a great deal of the
water was being lost in this sandy soil
00:09:50 - 2328
between the h—different head—head gates and so he
talked them into building concrete lined flumes between one head gate
and the next and helped them build it. And also recognized that it
would be u—used much less concrete if they made hemisphere shaped
ditches. So he made molds that they could make the concrete lined
ditches that were like canoe shaped all the way down the—the stream.
Also he helped them construct a reservoir and build the pipelines to
each of the homes so that where people had had to carry water from the
front ditch, they now had water piped into their homes. So he—he
was a real community leader in Butlerville.
DT: And I understand
that both your mother and father were involved in the cooperative
movement in your community, is that right?
00:11:03 - 2328
RL: Well, one of the
treasures, as I look back on it, was the Depression times that I was
raised in. And during then, there were a lot of farms that had
been foreclosed on. There were people who were unemployed.
And my father started a co-op for—or worked with a group for a co-op
where the men would go down to the coal mines and get loads of coal and
then bring them up. And my father’d get orders for the coal for
various households. And it was ans—astonishing because apparently
Americans don’t understand co-ops because these people would haul the
coal until they had enough money to buy what they needed and then they
wouldn’t fill the orders so that my father would have—have to coax them
to go down and—and get more coal in order to fill the orders
00:12:10 - 2328
that he had for the coal. So both he and my
mother had worked very hard on this. My grandfather also had
worked with the Mormon co-op and found that most people, as soon as
cheaper stores came in town, the—the customers would go to the cheap
stores and the co-op was failing, so my grandfather would buy out the
other members of the co-op. And for some strange reason, in an
area where you’d think co-ops would be flourishing, they never did get a
really substantial hold.
DT: Tell us a little
bit about the time that you were growing up. This is the
Depression.
00:13:04 - 2328
RL: In the—in the
early 30’s, actually much of the farming and the early period in Salt
Lake City was submarginal anyway, so that farms had a great deal of
difficulty just meeting their mortgages and taxes. But when the
Depression was really at its most severe in the early 30’s, my mother
was working with the neighborhood ladies and they would have childcare
seminars. They’d have ways to remodel clothing so that you could
have hand-me-downs that could go from one child to the next child and be
as conserving of what little wealth they had. And we just took it
for granted that everyone had to make the best of situations. It
would never occur to you that you would have grapes or fruit out of
season, but that you always bottled the—or preserved the fruits and
vegetables in your garden in the summertime so that you had, in the
basement, stored f—food for the wintertime. And it was
a—it—looking back on the—the last ten years, I would say, it looked much
more like pioneer days when you had to take care of yourself and plan
ahead.
DT: Do you think
that there’s a kind of ethic about being modest and frugal about your
life that you’ve carried with you since those days?
00:15:02 - 2328
RL: Oh, it’s made
life so much simpler for me because I set such a—a modest standard for
what is survival level. When I came to San Antonio, I knew that I
wanted to work in the little Quaker school, but the sensible thing, when
I saw how high rentals were, was to buy a house. So I looked
around and found a place that had a large backyard, facing south so that
I would get good sun exposure, and that would be modest enough that if I
really didn’t fit in here, this didn’t feel like home, that I could just
walk away from it. So I bought a modest little place and it turned
out to be just exactly what I
00:15:52 - 2328
needed. And the people who I worked with
later, who lived in elegant parts of town, just accepted that as who I
am. So it’s been no handicap to me, but it’s not an elegant
address, but it’s a very practical one and in a very heterogeneous
neighborhood that is very comfortable for me.
DT: Something else I
thought was interesting about your upbringing is that you’re from a
Mormon culture, but you had a very strong scientific training. So
there’s always been this kind of ambivalence to your life, where you had
a curiosity about the natural world, but a pretty strict religious
upbringing. And I was wondering how you balance that through your
life.
00:16:49 - 2328
RL: Well, when I was
a child, I lived in what was an idyllic world where, in Mormonism,
there’s such a child-centered culture that you can do almost anything
you want, but the limits are just taken for granted. Of course,
there’s the word of wisdom, with no smoking, no drinking, no drinking
alcohol or tea or coffee. But also the Golden Rule of being kind
and generous and the Ten Commandants of don’t lie and steal and so on.
And so the framework was a very comfortable one as a child. But
when I began having questions about some of the teachings that seemed so
literal, where you have to
00:17:49 - 2328
think about a God of body parts and passions, when
my God needed to be something that enclosed all of the natural world and
the kind of mysteries that I would feel when I would see rainbows or
beautiful mountain scenery and it just didn’t feel right to me that it
had to be so literal and so structured. And the sensible thing was
for me to move into the framework of science and explore things and look
at them in detail, understand how they operate. And it was very
puzzling to me that you could be an intelligent female and yet, on
Sunday, someone would tell you that females had been graced with the
privilege of having children and so men were given the priesthood as the
equivalent reward and that God spoke to people through the men, through
the priesthood. And that if a woman wanted to know something, she
could ask a man. Well, by the time I was ten years old, I
00:19:23 - 2328
already knew that there were a lot of stupid men on
the planet and I could never respect a God that would speak to a stupid
man before they speak to me. And so it seemed obvious that—that
somebody misunderstood, that that was not the way it should be.
And since many people were happy with the interpretation that many of
the Mormon officials had, I saw no reason in trying to rock the boat, so
I would make a bargain with the bishop or with the superintendent of
Sunday Schools. When I was teaching Sunday School, I would never
teach anything they didn’t believe, but I would never teach anything I
didn’t
00:20:08 - 2328
believe either. And the officials were very
comfortable with that. Of course, I knew that they saw me just as
a woman. I just a girl, what difference did it make? But to
me, it made a big difference. And it still left a great deal that
we could discuss—the Mormons crossing the Plains and the life of Jesus
and so on, so that it wasn’t as if it cramped our style at all.
But that way, I could go on with the putting off limits some of the
things that really couldn’t make any kind of sense to me at all.
And so I was very comfortable with moving forward and studying the
natural world and seeing that there was a great deal of
00:20:58 - 2328
puzzlement on how things worked. And the more
I discovered in biology, the more things were interrelated and how
important it was for us to see the community that’s established among
all living things on the planet.
DT: Well, maybe this
would be a good time to take—you talked a little bit about your
upbringing and both the sort of economic times and some of your
religious grounding. But through it all, it seems like you had a
curiosity about the scientific study of the world and I was wondering if
you could talk a little bit about going to the University of Michigan in
1940 and your exposure to natural sciences and to microbiology, in
particular. And maybe if there were any particular mentors that
were a great help.
00:21:54 - 2328
RL: Well, I think
the strongest mentor in this general field of education was my high
school chemistry teacher. He was just marvelous in challenging us
to learn about the importance of chemistry and one day in class, after
he had—we’d had a long discussion over some issue, he said oh yes, we’ll
know. When we drive through the countryside and we say Doctor
Lofgren’s Little Liver Pills written on the side of some barn, we’ll
know who Doctor Lofgren was. And I know he was teasing me and the
class all thought he was picking on me, but I knew that it was very
flattering. That I loved chemistry and
00:22:41 - 2328
so by the time I got to the University of Utah and
took the placement exam, I was put in the very top group of chemistry
students. I didn’t understand what was going on. They were
such geniuses in there that the teacher had big loops in the logic that
was going on and I couldn’t follow them at all. It—they weren’t
talking chemistry, they were talking some kind of theory. So I
went to the chairman of the department and said please move me down a
couple of classes because, of course, at the university, they had maybe
half a dozen different sections of the beginning chemistry class.
Well, by the time I was down in two or three levels below, I could
understand it. They were talking chemistry. So I had no
illusions about being a genius myself, I knew genius have flights of
fancy that I
00:23:39 - 2328
can’t follow. But I loved it and it made very
good sense because I knew that everything on the planet was made up of
atoms and molecules and now I was beginning to understand how they
interact with each other and how critical it is that the conditions be
just right if the complex molecules are to survive. And like those
of our bodies that have to maintain who we are and give us the equipment
that allows us to have the capacity to think and to hear or to feel.
DT: Did you get a
sense that the Earth was an unusual kind of combination of conditions
that made life possible? What did you take from what you just
said?
00:24:30 - 2328
RL: Well, the thing
that’s so interesting to me is that when you grow up in desert country,
you see the responsibility of providing environment for—for instance,
you need water as a component of life. And all you have to do is
to forget to water your garden for a week and Mother Nature takes care
of deciding which plants are the strongest and have the capacity to
survive and which ones are dead and they’re going to have to be
replaced. So that we know that individual differences show up as
stress comes from living in a very severe environment. And I think
that was a beginning in my understanding of how individual organisms
vary and in the amount of damage that comes from not getting what they
need. And also the importance of the whole environment in
providing the environment that particular individuals would need.
Why there’s going to be a difference in the sort of plants that grow in
the desert from those that grow in the tropics or in very rainy areas.
DT: When did you
decide to move on from a study of atoms and molecules and sort of the
makeup of the nonliving world and focus more on those chemicals that
have become part of the living world, of the microbiological world?
00:26:15 - 2328
RL: Well, the—I
think the part that I ha—I haven’t mentioned yet that I was one of the
people in the neighborhood who knew how to take care of accidents.
And so I loved first aid and I was the—well, of course, I was the oldest
child in our family, but also in the neighborhood. If somebody had
a really messy accident, I could help them get cleaned up before they
went home and told about it or in to talk to my parents about it.
One time my brother chopped his finger open and I put the skin back
together and bandaged it up after cleaning it up and the doctor the next
day said I—you did as well as I
00:27:01 - 2328
could’ve done. Of course, then he put some
stitches in to help hold the skin together. So I had the
impression that the in—intelligent thing for me to do was to become a
doctor. And when I was in my third year at the University of Utah,
the dean of the medical school, who was an old friend of my dad’s,
called me in and said you’re a good student so we’d be happy to have you
as the—a medical student, but let me tell you what’s it like to be a
doctor. When your—when they’re sick and you tell them what they
need to do, ha—take an aspirin every two hours and stay in bed and you
see them going into the movie downtown and then when they’re better,
they won’t pay their bills. He said it
00:27:50 - 2328
won’t take you six months to be in research.
You’ll never put up with that. I—I know you well enough to know
that you’d never stand for that kind of misbehavior. So why don’t
you just go into research directly? Well, he happened to be the
chairman of the bacteriology department at the University of Utah as
well as dean of the medical school. And so he took my transcripts
and I’d been taking 19, 20 hours a semester. He just said this
course is equal to that, this one is equivalent to that and so on and
ended up with saying that the next year, I could graduate as a senior in
microbiology with 16 hours
00:28:37 - 2328
toward my Master’s Degree. So I did and then
I did my Master’s on immunology and the host-parasite relationship.
And my chairman, who was a—a specialist in bug types, had written around
to his friends at the various universities and said I have a student
here that I think should go on to graduate work. Do you have
scholarships available? And so one day he came in and he said
University of Michigan—there are several other universities that would
have their places, but it was the—Michigan was the first microbiology
department in the country. The chairman of it, Fred Novey, had
studied with Salk and
00:29:28 - 2328
Pasteur in Europe and I think that would be the
best place to go because Novey is—he’s retired, but he’s around a lot
and I think that you’d get an excellent background. It—the
department is in the medical school so that it’ll be a specialized
microbiology. But I think this is good. So I went to
Michigan and had a marvelous time working on rash and fever and then on
the study of the finer structures of microorganisms with the electron
microscope. So we had face contrast microscopes and electron
microscopes to study the
00:30:17 - 2328
finer details of organisms. Then my chairman
was going on a speaking tour through South America. He was a
specialist in tropical diseases. And he came into the lab one day
and said I think it would be important for you to take my class while
I’m away. I said I wouldn’t be caught dead teaching because I
hadn’t realized until then I had very low opinion of teachers. All
of the professors that I had had, all the teachers I’d had that were
wonderful, I never thought of them as teachers. And so it’s
astonishing that he
00:30:59 - 2328
didn’t crack a smile or anything. He just
figured that I had a lot to learn and he said it’ll do you good.
He’d give me his notes and all I had to do was teach. He said
there’s only one trick that you need to know and that is learn the names
of the fellows that sit on the back row and when you’re lecturing and
somebody starts to whisper or catch the eye of their buddy, all you do
is say do you agree, Mister Smith? And it’ll scare the daylights
out of them; they’ll think you know everybody there because Doctor
Sewell did—h—photographic
memory. He did know everybody there. And so from then on,
they’ll all
00:31:45 - 2328
behave. And he was right. It was just
astonishing how magic it was when you just knew a few of the names of
the key mischief makers. But what I found was that people were so
much more interesting than bacteria. I had really enjoyed working
on microorganisms, but there’s no reason I couldn’t do both. So
from then on, I was working with students as well as the microorganisms.
DT: Do you think
that there’s something about studying life in its smallest components
that has helped you understand the makeup in life in a larger sense?
00:32:32 - 2328
RL: Well, the thing
I love most about microorganisms is that they’ve been totally ignored by
most people except in terms of disease and so people forgot that most
things that happen with the foods we eat—cheese—depends on the
microorganisms modifying the milk, yogurt as well, sauerkraut, beer,
wine, breads with its leavens from yeast, so that there’s a whole
spectrum of beneficial microorganisms. But the part that seemed
most obvious to me was the importance of microorganisms as they
decompose dead organic matter and waste material, so that if we did not
have that part of the living family
00:33:35 - 2328
in the community, we’d be buried in dead bodies and
waste. So that it’s absolutely essential that they see that third
component. The producers, the green plants trap the energy from
the sunlight and make possible the food that the higher animals can eat.
Then the consumers eat the food and s—give off waste that the
microorganisms need to decompose. So we need the three components,
two of which we are a—aware of—the producers and the consumers—but the
decomposers, we kind of ignore or treat as waste.
00:34:27 - 2328
And they’re not, they’re absolutely essential to
the cycle of life on the planet and many of them are very beautiful
organisms, so that if you have a chance to look at protozoa under the
microscope, you’ll be fascinated with them just as I am.
DT: Well, could you
describe one, the function and appearance is really (inaudible) beauty
for you?
00:34:56 - 2328
RL: If you take a
little—a drop of pond scum, you may find some organisms—you’ll see maybe
50 different varieties of organisms, but you’ll see some that have the
structure of a funnel. They’re vorticella and they’re my most
favorite beautiful ones. And they have cilia all around the mouth
of the funnel and they—the stem that they’re on, contract
with the beating of the flagella. It’s perfectly beautiful
to watch. And these—you see the—the feeding process because you
can watch the particles in the solution go by as these suck in the
nutrients that they need from the pond scum water.
DT: You know, I was
intrigued by looking at your history and that at one point, you were
offered to study sort of the darker side of bacteriology, for uses like
warfare, and I was wondering what your reaction was to that offer and
why you took that stance.
00:36:22 - 2328
RL: Well, the—one of
the great tragedies of this world is that the human race doesn’t get its
act together and so war is one of the most wasteful and yet prevalent
practices of human beings. When we were in—following World War II,
when the chairman of the department died, was replaced with another
individual who really believed that research in bacteriological warfare
was going to be the U.S.’s best protection against World War III.
And so he had set up a very strong mood in the department that we should
emphasize bacteriological warfare research. Well, I think that
that’s extremely dangerous for
00:37:26 - 2328
beginning students to be working with such virulent
organisms. But more than that, it’s very immoral because I can’t
think any—anything worse than the diabolical business of trying to kill
your enemy off with epidemics, microorganisms and so I saw this as
intolerable for me personally and though I knew that weapons of mass
destruction have been popular for a—as long as we can think back.
As we know, many of the American Indians were killed off with blankets
that had smallpox virus and set up smallpox epidemics with the American
Indians. So it’s a—a great tragedy in this world, but I told
00:38:25 - 2328
the chairman that I was not comfortable with this
and that I would resign from the department. And he said oh, no.
Just take a sabbatical. And I said, I’m not going to change my
attitude, my belief. I—I think this is unethical and I can’t be a
party to it. So I resigned as soon as I’d finished the last two
doctoral students because it’s an awful problem if you’re a doctoral
student and your chairman takes off. So I finished the two
doctoral students that I still had pending and then I resigned and went
to New York City to work in a research institute where I could then try
broader ideas on teaching. I—the
00:39:20 - 2328
one thing I really wanted to do was to see if
students couldn’t understand a functioning, living organism very quickly
when they’re beginning in physiology. And so rather than to sit
and memorize the names of enzymes and bones and muscles and so on, I
wanted them to get a sense of how an organism functions. So we
start off with a chicken foot with the—or chicken leg with the foot
attached so that they could see how the tendons pull the fo—the foot
forward. See how many different kinds of tissues there are all
00:39:57 - 2328
working together and then to see it from first the
organ and then the organ system that it’s connected with and then all
the parts that—right down to the toenails that make up a functioning
part of a living organism. And sure enough, I think it—that that’s
a very valid way to approach understanding physiology. But it
meant that I was moving from one small group of students, private
schools, to another and so this was a very, kind of chaotic time.
I loved it because I learned a lot personally.
DT: This was in the
City University of New York?
00:40:49 - 2328
RL: Well, this
was—this was working out of a research foundation in New York.
Working for a lot of different small schools and one of the
opportunities I had was to talk to a group of students at Brooklyn
College in City University in New York. And I couldn’t believe how
bright they were and how interested. They were just a marvelous
group of kids. And I had taught in the medical school at the
University of Michigan, so it isn’t as if I had come from a poor,
benighted population. But these young people were so in—well
informed and had such good questions that I was very impressed with
them. And of course, this was back in the days before open
admissions, when it was a scholarship school and only the brightest and
best of the high school graduates were given a free education at the
City University, that the—that city college—and Brooklyn College.
It was one of the city colleges. And so I didn’t realize that I
was really getting the cream of the crop of New York when I was visiting
it, Brooklyn. The
00:42:06 - 2328
chairman of the—oh, the friend that had taken me
there said you should talk to the chairman because we’d love to have you
teach here. And he said but—he was in education and, of course,
I—my training and all my credentials were in biology. So he said
you need to talk to the biology chairman. So I talked to the
biology chairman and he had, oh, half a dozen of faculty people in his
department there. They kept bringing me syllabi in and said what
do you know about this, what do you know about that? I could—
00:42:42 - 2328
all of them—when it came to ecology, I said well, I
don’t know much about that. And one of the world famous
biochemists that was on the faculty said I don’t either. Nobody
does. This is a hard field because you have to know a lot about
many things in order—how—see how the puzzle fits together. And of
course, in the last 40 years, a great deal has been known in that
direction. And we’re right, it is complicated.
DT: You were
migrating from bacteriology and microbiology really to much bigger
systems in a much bigger frame, talking about ecological systems.
When did that happen and what peaked your interest? Was it
something you read or students that you ran into or problems that you
were seeing in the natural world?
00:43:38 - 2328
RL: Of course, back
in my undergraduate days, I’d had background so that I could work on
something like host-parasite relationship with microorganisms,
understanding what the host was like because I’d had physiology.
And so I realized that if—when you get into the environment, then you
have—this is where the ecology comes in, where you have the host and the
parasite and the environment. They’re all functioning together.
And so to begin with, I had just been working on the broader picture of
physiology, of living organisms. And then when I wanted to work in
science education, it was important
00:44:22 - 2328
for me to go back and fill in some of the gaps that
I had. So I took a course in botany and I took some advanced
mathematics, calculus, so that I would have a—a better understanding of
the broad picture that science really presents when you pick any
particular field. So I had a course in—well, even at the
University of Michigan, my chairman had said I think you’d like to see
how microorganisms function with the—in their beneficial setting rather
than be a—a narrow setting of disease and host-parasite relationship in
medicine. And so he had me develop a course in the applied
microbial—biology and we had a wonderful time showing the liberal arts
students the beneficial uses
00:45:33 - 2328
of microorganisms. And that was probably the
first place that I ran into the im—importance of the community of
microorganisms that are used to decompose organic waste. And
that’s the way most sewage is decomposed, with activated sludge, which
is sludge being a community of living organisms. So I’d already
begun broadening my scope but the thing that seemed important was that
there needed to be better science training for teachers. And what
I wanted to do was to get into science education where elementary school
teachers, especially, needed to have a course in general science that
00:46:26 - 2328
would show the physical sciences and the biological
sciences and how they interrelate since the environment represents a
sort of the matrix in which living organisms exist. So we develop
a course, a graduate level, where we had in-service teachers coming in
for general science as a extension of their graduate program and
improving their science skills in the classroom. And occasionally
we’d get a—a student that would come in. First, he would—he—one
student was really shocked to see that a woman was teaching the course.
And then he wanted me to know that he hated science. He loved
social
00:47:20 - 2328
studies and history and the other areas of the
curriculum that he taught, but he personally hated science. And I
said doesn’t matter. All you have to do is work. The natural
world is so fascinating that once you put your nose in this and work
hard on it, you’ll be as intrigued with it as the rest of us are.
And so he s—stayed in the course. Within the few weeks, he was
volunteering to show how musical spoons can show rhythm and yet be
involved in sound and understanding the physical world. So I don’t
think there’s any question that if people—if teachers, especially, had a
clearer understanding of how you
00:48:15 - 2328
can explore the mysteries of the natural world by
scientific method that, in no time at all, you have a—a skill that can
answer questions for yourself. And every time you get an answer to
a question, what do you know? There are a whole lot more questions
that it opens up.
DT: I’m curious if
there were any books that you might have been reading along this time
that were posing questions for you or maybe providing some answers?
Were you reading Rachel Carson or Odom’s books or—what was introducing
some of these thoughts to you?
00:48:53 - 2328
RL: Well, I was so
new at all of this that I’m embarrassed to say the person who seemed
most inspiring to me as I was reading was John Dewey, where you learn by
doing. I—I was so convinced, and of course, I’d been raised that
way myself so that I just took it for granted that if you wanted to know
something, you went out in the field and took a look. And so when
I—when I began to explore how do the disciplines of education interface
with the science, I found out that a century before, people had been
puzzling about the same thing. And the best way to learn is to get
in there and try something.
DT: Did you take
field trips to local marshes or were you doing this work in the lab?
00:49:53 - 2328
RL: Well, when we
set up the—the teacher training program, we had field trips that would
just go around the block. Or we could go to the botanical gardens
that had all variety of opportunities for examples of what to do and
not—not to do in this world wh—to allow living organisms to survive.
I remember one class going along a line of trees in the gardens where
every time people had gone by, each person had—or child or whoever had
pulled a little piece of bark off the tree. And after thousands of
people went by, the
00:50:42 - 2328
tree was girdled and dead. And it was such a
revelation to see how vulnerable something can be when it looks as tough
as a tree does, standing along the—next to the sidewalk. So
the—little observations like this were helpful. I remember one of
my students who, after graduation, had—was teaching at a junior high
school. And she said she was out driving with her husband one
Sunday and suddenly she said stop the car, stop the car. And s—so
he quickly stopped the car, thinking it must be some emergency.
And she said I have to show you that. They had just passed a tree
that had had the bark knocked off.
00:51:29 - 2328
It was by a driveway and so probably a car had hit
it. And she wanted to show how the tree was healing. It had
come as such a revelation to her that, as we’d gone on a field trip, to
see that a tree could actually find a way of healing that kind of
damage, that she had to show her husband. And to me, that’s the
difference, when you actually begin to see how nature operates.
DT: What sort of
questions did your students bring to you, particularly the teachers?
Were there questions that they had about the natural world that they
wanted you to help them understand and then teach to their students?
00:52:11 - 2328
RL: Very often they
had questions that they had just settled for not understanding.
And one young woman that I remember had a husband and a couple sons that
had convinced her that, as the little woman, she didn’t need to
understand that—just call them and they could change the fuse plug or
they could do whatever is needed. And so she had thought of
herself as a sweet, lovely, gracious, intelligent lady. And she
had always puzzled because in the summertime, she could drive in and out
of the garage with no problem. The door opened with no problem.
But in the wintertime, the door often
00:52:57 - 2328
wouldn’t open and she couldn’t figure out why.
So she came into class one night just thrilled. She said this time
the door was stuck, it wouldn’t open. I got out of the car and I
took a look. Well, what was it? And she found that during
the day, the snow melted and the water ran down and then at night, it
froze and so the door was stuck in ice along the edge of the doorsill.
And as soon as she cracked the ice, the door would open. So you
could see from the twinkle in her eye that she knew she had a brain that
could handle this. She didn’t have to ask her husband or her boys
to go out and open the garage because she
00:53:44 - 2328
now understood what happened in Mother Nature and
that it was a perfectly normal process. She said I always thought
that things expanded when it got warm so I thought the door would be
bigger and it would bind in the summertime and then contract in the
winter. She said doesn’t have to contract. May have been
contracted, but the ice was the thing that had held the door from
opening.
DT: It sounds like
what you were trying to pass on was faith in the scientific method and
the ability to ask logical questions and that nature would provide
answers if you were observant. Is that fair?
00:54:26 - 2328
RL: Not only that,
but that scientific method’s a very natural kind of process and so that
the kinds of questions that children ask are the ones that the scientist
asks, too. And so if you don’t get to the place where you forget
what it was like to be a child and you learn how to memorize and you
learn how to dish back what was dished out to you so that you get
straight A’s on your transcript, then the chances are that you can go
back to that childlike inquisitiveness of actually looking to see
what—what the situation is. And you have a natural process of
moving into the scientific exploration of being disciplined
00:55:18 - 2328
about the keeping a narrow focus on what your
question is and then being honest about the results that you’re seeing.
And if you find that you can’t get any results, your question’s too
complicated. You need to break it down and find a smaller part of
that that you can ask. And so you get more and more specialized in
science. And often, if we’re not careful, we can lose our focus on
the place of that specialty in the whole picture.
DT: Where are we on
time?
(misc.)
DW: You mentioned that the
professor you worked with said that ecology was a tough subject because
you had so much, but historically, the word ecology doesn’t start
getting bandied about until sometime in the 1960’s as a discipline.
00:56:16 - 2328
RL: It was brand
new.
DW: And that would be my
question to you, is where does this sudden development of your interest
in it merge with the growing national, international and how would you
have been influenced by the sudden Earth Day and the sudden change from
the 1940’s and 50’s to that movement? Were you there as it was
happening? Both at the same time? One leading the other?
If maybe you could reflect on some of those—I guess Rachel Carson plays
into that. I mean, how suddenly people who you were around in
education became aware of this?
DT: Yeah, I’m
curious if you could tell us how ecological systems that have been
functioning for literally billions of years, all of a sudden in the
sixties, became of interest and through common discussion. What
was happening?
00:57:09 - 2328
RL: I think one of
the wonderful things was sort of collision course between the
recognition specialists that they an—were beginning to understand how
logical nature is and the people, in general, who began to see the
destruction of the environment and how you couldn’t, as pioneers did,
just move onto a clean place and—and pollute that. But that if you
are involved in living near smokestacks or living near refineries, that
your—
00:57:51 - 2328
the children have problems with the—the residues
that—or maybe the fumes that are coming in. The—they just
beginning to understand that lead based paints were a real hazard
because if children ate the paint chips, they would be getting lead
poisoning. And so from the medical side of people and the
sicknesses that they were showing, it—we began to understand how
important the environment was. And so the specialists had specific
information that they could bring to it. And so during the period
of the early 60’s, we began to build this field that was known as
ecology, that was the relationship
00:58:46 - 2328
between the organism and its environment. Or
I should say the community of organisms and their environment, because
almost never, except in a bacteriology lab, do you have a pure culture
of something. Most everywhere you put your finger down, there are
dozens or maybe hundreds of very different kinds of organisms that
exist. And so out of this came a—a few very popular revelations.
And I think Rashel—Rachel Carson’s recognition of the damage we were
doing to the environment and that if we’re not careful, there will be a
silent spring. And if we don’t take precautions, we’ll have more
00:59:49 - 2328
and more of the organisms that are sensitive to the
environment become extinct and we’ll live in a world that is populated
with those that can survive a very unpleasant environments.
Unfortunately, rats and mice and cockroaches are among those, but human
beings are among it, too. So that no matter how bad the
degradation gets, the amazing thing is that human beings reproduce.
May not flourish, they may be malnourished and they may be disabled, but
wherever you put your finger down, you can
01:00:36 - 2328
find populations of women with a step—a stepladder
of little children that have survived war and famine and disease and are
still reproducing. So my impression is that we’re beginning to see
the broad picture and how critical it is that we find ways, not only to
protect the environment from further degradation, maybe slow down some
of the processes that are causing global warming or the serious
pollutions that occur in various places. So we had cleanup
programs that were started here in—in San Antonio. We had
01:01:31 - 2328
Kelly Air Force Base, that when it was turned back
to private enterprise, one of the important things is how to clean it up
and especially the plume of polluted groundwater that is spreading out
from Kelly.
[End of Reel 2328]
DT: Miss Lofgren, I
thought you might be able to take us to the next chapter in your life.
You’d been teaching both teachers and some students in science education
when you were in New York, but in, I guess it was 1976, you decamped to
San Antonio where you undertook to teach kids, in particular, and I was
wondering if you could talk about shifting your life to San Antonio and
the idea of focusing more on kids and their understanding the natural
world?
00:01:50 - 2329
RL: Well, the thing
that encouraged me to leave New York City, much as I enjoyed working
with the students and the student teachers, was the fact that the city
went broke and it wasn’t fun to teach anymore. We had copy
machines but no paper for the machines and it was quite obvious that it
takes money to run a city and to—certainly to run a city university.
So the sensible thing was for me to take early retirement and move on.
For my tenured line, the chairman of the department could easily replace
me with two or three young instructors that could carry my ball and I
could move onto the next
00:02:44 - 2329
stage. So I had been visiting in Mexico,
among my travels, and there was a little Quaker school in
Matawalla that I thought the old
lady who was the director of the school would enjoy having someone come
down who could help with science enrichment, but also, while I’m
learning Spanish, maybe I could teach a little English to their
children. And here was a school that was from—had been part of the
early history of Mexico, where missionaries had gone down—Quaker
missionaries had started the little school called the
(?) Benito Juarez. And the
woman who was now in her 80’s, who had been the—a young student at the
school in the days of the Mexican Revolution, when the missionaries were
being killed, all of the churches pulled their missionaries back into
the U.S. and as they
00:04:03 - 2329
left Matawalla, they said to Maria Castillo, I
think what you should do is the best you can to keep the school going.
But that we’ll try to send help, fa—at least, financial help down from
the—the U.S. She never heard anything more so that the—no messages
got through. And she would scrub floors at night in the hotels in
order to make enough money so that she could take children from poverty
stricken homes into the school. So she supported the school by
hard work at night and then in the daytime, she runs classes. And
I was so impressed with her biography and I liked the lady herself.
So I thought it
00:05:00 - 2329
would be an—a delight if I could work in the little
Quaker school. I had a scholarship through the United Friends
Meeting and planned to go down, but when I found that she had been very
ill and a son-in-law had taken over helping her manage the school and he
was horrified that an Anglo and a female would move in on his territory
when it was quite clear that this (?)
Benito Juarez was right downtown Matawalla, sort of next to the
cathedral, that after her death, this would be a very valuable property.
That it was awful to have this stranger move in on his territory.
So I’m very su—superstitious. If a thing’s
00:06:01 - 2329
not right, then it’s not for me. And so when
I could see that there was such a gulf between what his image of what
the future of the little (?) was
and mine. And then, as a miracle would have it, it began to rain
and it rained for three days straight. There was not a movie house
or a library or anything in the town that could support somebody like me
and I’m not pioneer material myself. I come from pioneers, but I—I
liked New York City with its richness of culture. So I was
horrified at the lack of any kind of personal
00:06:57 - 2329
support system that I could find there and I
thought Mother Nature’s right. This is not for me. So I
decided it would be nice to be close to Mexico so I could go down and
visit my friends there. I have friends in Mexico City and
Ciela
Victoria as well as Matawalla. And so I went to the library and
everything I saw about San Antonio just looked like the Chamber of
Commerce had written it. Beautiful and so betweens—I knew that
there were two Quaker pastors here and I knew there’d been a bilingual
conference held several times. So I wrote to the pastors, got no
answer from either of them. One was
00:07:45 - 2329
Spanish speaking and the other was English
speaking. And so between semesters in January, I flew from New
York City to San Antonio. I left New York with dirty snow and
green gray skies and dreary town, pulled into San Antonio—blue skies,
white clouds, bougainvillea blu—blooming in the gardens. I just
couldn’t believe my eyes; it looked like heaven on Earth. And warm
weather so that you didn’t need a jacket and here it was January.
And so I went to the bus station to get the bus routes and a map of the
area and si—found the address of the little church that I’d written to.
And he—I said oh, this is
00:08:45 - 2329
such a gorgeous state; I can just walk over there.
He said oh, I don’t think I would if I were you. It’s across the
tracks. I didn’t realize that San Antonio was a very segregated
town. There was a west side and there was an east side and there
was a north side and there was south side. And west side was
Mexican or Hispanic and the east side was black and the south side were
the old Texas people and the north side was pretty much the newcomers
and the military. So it was a very strange thing because this was
sort of
00:09:26 - 2329
pre-World War II and everyone was very comfortable
with the designations. So as I—I walked over, because it didn’t
bother me that it was across the tracks, and the closer I got to the
address, the more the people that—when I would ask them I—in the right
direction, began speaking Spanish. And what little Spanish I had,
I could struggle along and they’d recognized the name of the
school—or—or what I thought was going to be a church. I came to
the address and here on the corner of Trinity and
Lombrono, there
00:10:08 - 2329
were a whole series of little minibuses that all
said Friends Special School on the side. So that instead of
finding a little church, I found a school. And when I went in, the
director, Raymond Martin, couldn’t see me immediately because there was
an emergency in one of the classrooms, but he cleared his calendar after
the emergency resolved, and we visited for the next few hours. It
turns out he was a Quaker pastor who had come to San Antonio. He
found that the policy here was to put children who were disruptive and
00:10:55 - 2329
who were street children in the hospital for the
criminally insane and just leave them there. They were throwaway,
unwanted and so he said th—there should be someone in there teaching
them. It’s critical that children just not sit in limbo. So
he s—went in, started classes for them and then he said we should have
an alternate facility. It’s unwise that this be part of a hospital
setting. So he went back to school, he got his PhD in clinical
psychology and the credentials for school administration. Started
his own school and it had been up to about 150 children. These
were the children that the juvenile probation and the schools would farm
out to private schools rather than try to educate
00:12:02 - 2329
them in a setting that was not providing the needs
they had. The—emotionally disturbed children can work for a little
while and then something happens and they get very disruptive and
misbehaving.
DT: Was he able to
teach them some science or anything about environmental science?
What was he teaching them?
00:12:27 - 2329
RL: The astonishing
thing was that it took me about half an hour with several of them to
find out that you don’t really teach emotionally disturbed children.
What you do is give them a few minutes of organized behavior. When
they’re getting along fine in following directions and in logically
building a—a (inaudible) or
whatever they’re doing, maybe photography, and then something happens to
them and you can see by the body language that in another two minutes,
they can be destroying things. And so that’s the time to take the
canister and go out into the fields that was a part of the campus of the
00:13:18 - 2329
school and catch insects for the terrarium or bugs
that—to examine under the microscope. And as soon as they were out
running around, their body language—they’d relax and they’d be
comfortable again.
DT: So you took them
on field trips and outdoor exercise?
00:13:40 - 2329
RL: And they—so you
don’t really have lessons and the kind of thing that I had always been
used to, organized instruction, but you just sort of improvise as you go
along, leaping from one activity that takes short time to accomplish to
the next thing. And to try and hope that they can get a sense of
where they fit into this whole picture so that there’s something
beneficial by catching the insects because the lizards or whatever is in
the terrarium will need something to eat. And so they see that as
constructive and yet there is not something which is a—a—sort of
continuous lesson for them.
DT: You did this
for, what, two years? Is that right?
00:14:39 - 2329
RL: Well, I came in
and after I’d finished the work that I had to completed in New York.
So I got in—in October of 1986—1976. And the school had already
started, of course, the teachers had been organizing since August and
the children came in at September. And already, there’d been some
teachers that—that couldn’t stand the destruction of the children, the
disorganization of them and so there’d been a turnover already in
teachers at that point. But a very wise principal who was helping
Raymond Martin suggested that I only take one child at a time into the
science area. And fortunately the Region 20 Science Division here
provided all kinds of wonderful equipment for me, so I immediately had
the science area equipped with photographic equipment, with a terrarium,
an aquarium and microscopes and hand lenses and anything that I wanted.
I could get living specimens from the Region 20 headquarters for the
terrarium, so…
DT: Were there any
kind of exercises that gave epiphanies for these kids, that really
opened their eyes to the natural world?
00:16:14 - 2329
RL: Well, I think I
had a rather select population because their teachers gave them the
reward when they’d done their classroom work. If they completed it
well and efficiently, they had the privilege of going to science.
So I think there were some children I never did see that—maybe be the
most disturbed ones—but all the ones that loved science loved the
natural world and enjoyed coming to science when they were in a mood to
enjoy anything. The amazing thing to me was how important
photography was to them. They could take pictures, then I’d
develop the film and then they could, in the darkroom,
00:17:02 - 2329
enlarge the film and print pictures. And it
was interesting to see, some of the children wanted to take pictures
only of inanimate objects or sometimes only plants or animals.
Some of them wanted no pictures except their friends so that they—there
was a big difference among the children in how they used the
photography, but they were all fascinated to watch the pictures come up
in the darkroom. To put a—a blank piece of paper into a pan of
chemicals and to watch, little by little, the—the details in the picture
come up. So that a few of the children were just fascinated with
that.
DT: Well, then, did
you take any of these kids to Mitchell Lake? When did that start?
00:17:53 - 2329
RL: No, the—this
was—this was a—a—a period before then and the public schools started a
program for special education. So they drew back into the public
schools for their special ed classes all the children that were not
really serious cases. So by the time I got to San Antonio, all of
the children—almost all of them—were on medication that came to the
school. And some of them would have three and four seizures a day,
even though they were on medication. So that it was just the
bottom of the barrel that was left when I was there and the—the
superintendent, Raymond Martin, said that we were just
00:18:42 - 2329
being exploited as a kind of holding tank for the
children that really belonged in institutional care. And so he
closed the school. So after 1978, I had a chance to work in
volunteer organizations and I had called the League of Women Voters to
say how do you register to vote here? And the woman who answered
the phone was the present—at that time, president—president of the
League and she talked me into joining and, within a few months, I was on
the board because the water chair had resigned and since that was a
00:19:32 - 2329
field that I was fascinated with, I saw the
importance of water and I knew that San Antonio was semiarid and had
this miracle of an aquifer under it. And so I became water chair
for the League of Women Voters.
DT: What were some
of the major water issues that you dealt with? Was it Applewhite
or Edwards Aquifer Recharge problems? Could you mention some of
those?
00:20:03 - 2329
RL: The—as a member
of the League of Women Voters, they call us a public interest group, or
a PIG. I didn’t—until I went to a regional conference in Houston,
I’d never heard the term that I was a PIG, but that’s what the—my group
of public interest groups was designated. But that provided me the
background to become—just to be appointed to the city’s 201 wastewater
advisory committee for City Council. And so I had considerable
information from my own background in microbiology on—because they used
waste activated sludge method of decomposing sewage here, this was a
natural for me.
DT: And at this
time, San Antonio was just building some of their secondary treating
plants?
00:21:07 - 2329
RL: San Antonio was
in a serious bind. The city was growing so much faster than the
infrastructure, so that the—the three treatment plants they had were
running about 150 percent of capacity, which means they can’t run
efficiently. They just have to flow the sewage on through.
But they used an—natural lake in San Antonio. In 1901, the city
made a contract with the irrigators that owns a little lake to put in a
dam and allow—allow the lake to enlarge, so that it could receive the
San Antonio City sewage. And they ran a line—a canal at that
time—from the sewer farm that was over about where Stinson Field is over
to Mitchell Lake. And so the lake get bigger and bigger and
bigger, so that
00:22:09 - 2329
it went from this pond that it was prehistorically
to a—let’s see, it must’ve been about 900 acres at—before it was
modified. And that way, the city’s sewage went into this pond that
if—at—for the first few years, it was fine because the irrigators had
fertilizer in their water so that their—the corn that was irrigated with
lake—water from Mitchell Lake grew a foot taller than the corn that was
watered with just ordinary river water. But after a few decades,
the lake became so soupy that it was no longer a—a lake with fishing and
00:23:05 - 2329
hunting and boating, but at that point, it was
really a sewage lagoon. And finally by the 60’s, the city bought
the property and managed it in connection with the Rilling Road
Treatment Plant as a, really, wastewater facility.
DT: And at what
point did you start to realize that this might be a wildlife resource, a
place to go birding and to protect…
00:23:36 - 2329
RL: Well, when I
first came here and was on the 201 wastewater advisory committee, I
wanted to know what the plant was like, or what the whole system was
like. And so I took a tour of the—one of the engineers was very
kind and took me from plant to plant and showed me that. And among
the—the tour was a—a visit to Mitchell Lake. And here was 1200
acres—well, 1400 acres by that time—and of beautiful farm country with
this big lake in it. A lot of volunteer bushes and trees, but it
was clear that this was an idyllic part of South San Antonio. The
lake had been modified so the north end of the
00:24:28 - 2329
lake had been cut off so that they made small ponds
that they put the fresh sewage into—or the fresh activated sludge so
that the lake itself was allowed to just continue with nature’s process
of decomposing the sludge. But it was clear that this was a
perfectly marvelous property. But they had a serious emergency
with how do you handle thousands of extra gallons of activated sludge
that the city’s plants couldn’t handle? So I was on the planning
program for the Dos Rios Treatment Plant. I knew that there was a
new plant coming online, but there’d been such confusion.
Originally, this—the federal
00:25:20 - 2329
government said let cost be no factor. Make a
plan that gives you a state of the art treatment plant. So we’ll
pay maybe 75 percent of the cost. Well, then, a—a while later, it
will say well, maybe 50 percent, well, maybe 25 percent. And so
that—back to the drawing boards and have to modify the plans.
Well, the chief engineer on this, who became later the CEO for the
wastewater—for the San Antonio water system, he said every time it was
back to the drawing boards, they improved the plans so that we have a
much better plant than if it had actually been implemented in 1972.
But it finally came
00:26:08 - 2329
online in 1987 so that, at that point, no more
waste activated sludge came to Mitchell Lake and it was possible for
them to see that the lake was abandoned and they were getting all of the
sewage treatment at Dos Rios Treatment Plant and the other two plants,
Solano and Leon Creek. And one of the Beyer Audubon women came to
me and said the place is drying up. Without the sludge coming in,
you know, this used to be a little pond. And so if—in this desert
country, this is going to dry up. We don’t have the mudflats that
00:26:55 - 2329
the shorebirds and waterfowl need. And in
1972, the Audubon nat—the San Antonio Audubon people had pled with the
city council to declare it a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and
waterfowl. I hadn’t realized when I’d seen the layout as part of
the sewage system that it was on the central flyway for the whole of
Northern American continent. And so twice a year, the birds came
through this sort of funnel down into Texas and right over Mitchell
Lake. And since this was the o—o—only—one of two
00:27:36 - 2329
natural lakes in Texas, this was an ideal place for
the birds that needed sh—shoreline and the waterfowl. And so they
had a—a tremendous population and diverse population of birds come
through Mitchell Lake. The Audubon people had known that since the
40’s. By the 50’s, they organized a birding club here and so it
was clear that this was not only a wastewater facility, but it also was
a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl. And when the lake
was abandoned by the wastewater treatment, now is the time it can be
converted into a wildlife refuge. So when Susan came—Susan Rust
said the place is
00:28:35 - 2329
drying up, we went to the wastewater department
chairman and said we need water to come—and I knew there was a gravity
flow line from Leon Creek Treatment Plant to the lake—to the bottom of
the lake. We need ef—treated effluent to come from Leon Creek
Treatment Plant to the lake to maintain the water levels there and keep
it from drying up and provide the habitats for the birds. He said
we’ll do that on condition that the—Helen Dutmer, who was the chairman
of the 201 wastewater committee—if she’ll make, and then he composed the
name of the organization. The committee was supposed to be the
00:29:19 - 2329
Mitchell Lake Recovery Advisory Subcommittee of the
201 Wastewater Advisory Committee of City Council. And that was
our official name. It eventually got shortened down to
MLRC. But Helen said yes, that if I would co-chair of the
committee so she didn’t have to attend all the meetings, that we would
have a Mitchell Lake recovery advisory subcommittee. And at that
point, we organized a committee of specialists to analyze and develop a
plan. It’s called the comprehensive plan for the cleanup and
ongoing management of the Mitchell Lake property. Well, Mitchell
Lake and Ch—and
00:30:12 - 2329
Chavaneaux Gardens, which was the—the land north of
Mitchell Lake. And but that had been used for irrigation to get
rid of some of the liquid from the—the sludge. And so at that
point, the chairman of the wastewater department had treated effluent
flowing into Mitchell Lake to maintain water level. And that was
1987 and it’s been flowing ever since. It’s nine years now.
So that has maintained the habitat for the shorebirds and waterfowl that
come through and…
DT: When did you
first start having educational programs at Mitchell Lake?
00:31:04 - 2329
RL: I think the—the
first real program was a—in 1990 when the Junior League sent a notice
around to various organizations of the fact that they thought that the
environment was an important issue that they should add environmental
projects as one of the choices that they—their girls could volunteer
for. And so, though they were working in various
00:31:32 - 2329
activities around the city, they didn’t have
anything that was environmental. And so when the notice came to
the League of Women Voters and I said we’ll invent one. So we
invented the—the Mitchell Lake Wetlands Project and I presented it to
the Junior League population and five or six girls signed up for the
project. I had assumed that we could then just go out and plant
aquatic plants and start making it into a real wetlands and was rather
shocked when I discovered that it wasn’t a wetlands. They
were—th—these diked areas had so much sludge deposit in them that the
algae loved growing there and that the
00:32:32 - 2329
algae on decomposing made the water more alkaline.
And of course, San Antonio water’s already alkaline. And so in
some of them, the pH was as high as 8 or 9. Well, now it’s 9 to
11, so it’s—in the ten years that has gone since. So it was not
appropriate for the girls to go out and plant aquatic plants and they
took one look at it and said with the reputation that Mitchell Lake has
as a stinking sewage lagoon, we need public education that says let’s
convert from that image to one that says wildlife refuge. So they
put on a project of public education and the first thing they did
was—the first year, they
00:33:23 - 2329
worked on learning more about wastewater treatment
and what was involved to how it was polluted. And then they
developed a pa—brochure that told the story of the dream of a Mitchell
Lake Wildlife Refuge and a charming brochure. The first printing
disappeared almost immediately because people were delighted to find out
that there was an alternative to the image that they’d had in the past.
And the greater Chamber of Commerce reprinted it and that—I have just a
few copies left of the—that reprinting. So
00:34:09 - 2329
our first educational process was working with the
Junior League girls and this—the second year, they put on a photo
contest. And one of the things that they had from the photo
contest, it was Focus on wildlife and Focus on the wetlands and
cosponsored with the San Antonio Express News.
And they rounded up enough money to offer some really good prizes in a
whole series of areas so that professional photographers from far and
wide came for the photographic sessions there. And some of the
most beautiful pictures you can imagine of the early morning ones, but
also some sunset pictures that
00:35:07 - 2329
were outstanding. And so they had a wonderful
ceremony of the recognizing these as outstanding winners of the
photographs. The Express News did a beautiful job,
full pages of reproductions of the photographs. Another one of the
programs that they put on was Dining with a Heron, where they had a tent
near the gate at Mitchell Lake and tables and chairs and box lunches and
invited a lot of the decision makers and important people that could
make a difference in understanding about Mitchell Lake to dine with the
00:36:01 - 2329
heron. I remember Mike Greenberg, one of the
writers for the—the Express News, he said Mitchell Lake is
all wet; it’s for the birds as the heading for his article that was very
favorable on the potential of Mitchell Lake as a wildlife refuge.
DT: Did you soon
start having children come out and students?
00:36:32 - 2329
RL: Of course,
the—the girls brought their children out, but at this point, we hadn’t
anything that formal. The fourth year of the project, they go one
year at a time and each one had developed well, and so the fourth year,
if it’s something that the community can take over, the Junior League
pulls back and you work on the—a community activity. So at that
point, we developed the Mitchell Lake Wildlife Refuge as the basis for
developing 501(c)3 organization where we took the people who were
dedicated supporters of Mitchell Lake as a wildlife refuge into the
Mitchell Lake Wetland Society.
00:37:30 - 2329
And the girls—Susan Rust was very helpful in
helping us write the bylaws and we incorporated as Mitchell Lake Wetland
Society. This is our twelfth year at this point and the population
was—the membership was drawn from San Antonio Audubon Society, the Beyer
Audubon Society, the League of Women Voters and the Junior League.
So we had a good core and then, of course, others that heard about it
began to join. And there have been people coming to Mitchell Lake
to do birding over the years from all over the world. And so one
of our members or a couple of our members are in England. They’re
in probably a dozen different states. Now some of them have lived
here and have moved
00:38:25 - 2329
to some other state and still maintain their
membership in the Mitchell Lake Wetland Society, but some of them have
just come through San Antonio and heard about this. Just recently
a lady was visiting our Quaker meeting and she mentioned that she was an
avid birder and she was on her way down to the coast to see the whooping
cranes. And so someone brought her over during coffee hour and
said she needs to know about Mitchell Lake. And so I said let’s
plan a visit so the—the following day, one of the really outstanding
birders in the area met us at Mitchell Lake. I took her down and
then
00:39:11 - 2329
Georgina took her birding at Mitchell Lake and then
Georgina took her back to her hotel. And I said the important
thing for you is to remember when you go back to New Jersey, because
there are a lot of avid birders in New Jersey—when you go back to New
Jersey, please tell everybody before you go down to the see the whooping
cranes, stop at Mitchell Lake and—because they’ll fly into San Antonio
before they go down. So this was just—just perfect. And so
we have still a wide variety of people that come through, but we need
the core support in local residents so that our local politicians
understand that this is very precious. It may be city property,
but it really belongs to the community.
(misc.)
DT: Miss Lofgren,
earlier you were saying that the next step was setting up some sort of a
teacher education program, is that correct, at Mitchell Lake?
00:40:18 - 2329
RL: Well, there’s
such a wonderful opportunity there for letting in-service teachers view
nature in its setting at Mitchell Lake that we organized teacher
workshops on—ecological workshops for elementary school teachers.
And they could be self-selective, so we just advertised around and said
Mitchell Lake Wetland Society is offering a teacher’s workshop in
environmental education. The morning will be spent in the field,
seeing nature as it’s in operation. The afternoon will be spent at
Palo Alto College on activities that you can take back to the classroom
for your—your own school. And we
00:41:12 - 2329
had one population of 15 teachers the first time.
Occasionally we’d have extra people that we couldn’t accommodate because
we wanted to limit to 15 because they had to be on buses to—or vans to
tour the wetlands. And then the second year, we had so many that
we had two full sections and a few more. We had people come as far
as from Catholic schools in Eagle Pass and many of the private schools
in San Antonio as well as the public schools. And we found that
they enjoyed the fieldwork so much that they thought this was really
unfair that they had to go back to the classroom for the afternoon,
00:42:11 - 2329
and I think partly because we had one of the
world’s best birders, Ernie Roney, for the—the fieldwork on th—the
wetlands. And for the uplands section of the workshop, David
Ribble from Trinity University, the chairman at Trinity now, who was
marvelous on small mammals. And so—and I did the limnology of
a—the lake discussion of the—the lake, the wetlands and the uplands as a
part of the picture of the whole wildlife. And then I think they
all enjoyed the bottle gardens that they made and the special
s—specimens they had to identify as if they were on a field trip for
their class. So the afternoon was enjoyable but they all loved
being right out in the field.
DT: What is a bottle
garden?
00:43:17 - 2329
RL: You put in a
bottle that can be closed gravel and soil and some plants—small plants
that fit into the garden—and make a small terrarium and then water it,
close it off and you can watch the condensation of the—the moisture in
the air run down the sides of the bottle. And you can make this on
this—elaborate as you want. But it can be as small as a quart
bottle or and—we bought containers that were sort of spherical with a
flat bottom so that it was more attractive than just a regular quart
bottle. And these can grow in your windowsill and if you want tiny
animals in there, it’s possible. If—if—use any
00:44:23 - 2329
imagination you want. You can watch the
plants grow and outgrow their environment, if you like. But it
makes it a nice classroom activity for the children and it gives a—an
excellent setting of how important the root system for a plant is, as
well as the part that we’re used to seeing that—that grows above ground.
DT: Well, it’s
intriguing to me that you’ve, in so many different circumstances,
whether it was in Michigan or New York or San Antonio, in schools and
out in the field, Mitchell Lake and in classrooms, that you’ve worked
with education again and again. And I was wondering if you could,
perhaps, tell us what sort of message you would want to give to young
people about the environment, about an understanding of the natural
world that they could take away and maybe apply in their own lives?
00:45:27 - 2329
RL: Well, I think
one of the important things is that we find a way to help urban people
understand that they’re part of the natural world. I think we’re
so re—re—remote from the natural processes that go on—even the sources
of our food—that we don’t think in terms of our being the same
vulnerable organisms affected by the same environmental factors that
lower organisms are. And so I’d like to see everyone have an
opportunity to get acquainted with their place in nature. And the
part that I think is so exciting is that there are now—coming widespread
recognition of the importance of this in urban life. And the book
of The Last Child in the Woods is a compilation that shows
all the
00:46:31 - 2329
research that points in the direction of how you
can be just as malnourished if you don’t have an understanding of
yourself as a living organism as you are if you don’t get the vitamins
that you need. I know I have that personal feeling with music.
I find that music is just as essential to me in my own healthiness as
vitamins are. So the exciting thing to me was to discover that
there are a lot of young people that recogn