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Seven Alums share highlights of their overseas
studies.
Postscripts
Santiago David Boyer,
'96
Cliveden Mary Hamaker,
'83
Kyoto Scott
Johnston,'89
Florence Jeff Dykes,
'76
Tours Rob Joseph, '71
Beutelsbach Susan
Burgenbauch, '65
Vienna Sue Greim Glader,
'88
Santiago
David Boyer, '96
Fall-Winter '93-94
I simply came back another person. My friends didn't even recognize
me. I became more sensitive, I don't know if that's the right word. I
felt better about myself and what I
wanted to do and accomplish. . . . I was talking with the woman who
hosted me, Marta, about tacos. I asked if they had tacos here and she
said, "Of course." I told her how I loved them. I went on and on, and
she looked at me like I was this morbid person. It turns out that in
Chile, a taco is a major car accident. . . . There was this woman,
Theresa, who worked in our house. I bought her a gift, a little crystal
cat. It wasn't a huge financial sacrifice for me. She broke down in
tears when I gave it to her. She didn't want to accept it. I talked to
Marta about it, and she told me Theresa had cleaned off her mantle and
invited the whole neighboorhood to come and look at the cat. I didn't
expect that.
Cliveden
Mary Hamaker, '83
Fall '82
I was in the train station in Grenoble, France, one night. There
were men who kept asking me in different languages what time it was.
They were trying to find out what language I spoke. Then they proceeded
to harass me in English. I
boarded the train and selected a nonsmoking car and closed my door. I
saw a guy in a Stanford sweatshirt walk down the aisle and yelled, "Hey
Stanford, come back." He was working for Hewlett-Packard in Grenoble. I
explained why I was frightened, and he stayed with me. . . . Before Big
Game, we bribed the maids for bedsheets, bought red felt pens and made
a letter for each sheet, spelling BEAT CAL. We went to the Tower Bridge
in London, pinned Coke cans to the bottom so it would hang straight and
then hung it over the bridge.
Kyoto
Scott Johnston,'89,
MS '91, MS '96, MBA '96
Spring '91
While I was working in Japan, we were contracting with a Silicon
Valley design company. They weren't sending us the product. I called them
up, and was told they were all practicing for the companywide
lip-syncing contest. I had to explain this to my Japanese boss, and I
was sitting there in my Japanese company uniform. Of course, my
translation was that they were "really busy." This made me appreciate
the broad skills needed to satisfy worldwide customers. . . . I lived
in the company dorm and we had a company bath, cafeteria and did
exercises in the morning. The single members of the company slept in
one room on mats on the floor. We had bells that started lunch break
and ended it. It was eye-opening to see how another culture can develop
so differently.
Florence
Jeff Dykes, '76
Winter-Spring '75
As a Californian, I found Italy very congenial. The rhythm of the
place was very familiar to me. But Florence is a strange place. The
people can be very arrogant and standoffish. Part of it is an insular
reaction to tourists. I tried to catch them off guard, when they were
most open. It was very easy for the Stanford villa to become an island.
Those of us who were serious got out as much as possible. Through local
friends, I found out about a tiny wine bar by the agricultural stock
exchange. Resistance fighters from World War II hung out there. I used
to go down there to study and drink glasses of Chianti. After I became
part of the landscape, I started talking to these guys. It was
tremendous.
Tours
Rob Joseph, '71
Fall-Winter '70-71
I hadn't taken French since my freshman year. I was going to refresh
my memory during the summer. Everyone said, "Don't worry, you'll pick
it right up." Well, I
never did. . . . I remember they had a program where you could go into
local homes for a Sunday night dinner; I did that a couple of times. I
had to converse in French for three to four hours. I'd get back to the
dorm and collapse on my bed just exhausted. . . . I would meet someone
on a train or anywhere, and they would ask me where I went to school.
And I would say, Tours. I would say it about 20 different ways, and
still they couldn't understand me. Finally I would spell it, and they
would say, "Ahhhhhh, Tours!"
Beutelsbach
Susan Burgenbauch, '65,
Winter-Spring '63
It changed my life. I had started studying math; I wanted to be a
teacher. I went to Germany my sophomore year, and it widened my field
of interest so much that when I came back I changed my major to
cultural anthropology. I took courses in psychology, anthropology and
religious studies. I think it was the whole experience of being there
and meeting the families and seeing different cultures. Going overseas
made me intellectually curious. I realized how much I didn't know, and
suddenly studying math was too narrow.
Vienna
Sue Greim Glader, '88
Winter-Spring '87
On a trip to Poland we met a group of Polish students at a bar who
wanted to practice their English. We talked to one fellow about his
dream of coming to America. He said he would get turned down for a
visa. All he wanted in the world was to come to our country, and he
couldn't. That really hit us. Later, we were going back to Vienna, and
crossing the border there were what looked like 16-year-olds with
machine guns. That trip to Poland stayed with me, the lines for bread
or for whatever. In some cases, it didn't seem like anyone knew what a
line was for, people just got in it. It was very educational. The trip
was dark but also great.
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