|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
November
U. of I. classics department
celebrating 100th year
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
11/4/05
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Cartoon
of William Abbott Oldfather. |
|
|
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The department of the classics
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is celebrating the
anniversary of its 100th year – the highs and the lows, the goods
and the bads of its century-plus history.
The celebration, “Over One Hundred Years of Classics at the University
of Illinois,” will take place from 1:30 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
(Nov. 9) in the Colonial Room of the Illini
Union, 1401 W. Green St., Urbana.
The event, which Kirk Freudenburg, head of classics, describes as “a
gala celebration,” is free and open to the public. A companion
display on the first floor of the University
Library, 1408 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, will be on view from Wednesday
through the end of the month.
 |
| Oldfather
founded “The Walking Club.” From 1909
until his death in 1945, he led a group of scholars
every Saturday into the woods for singing, hiking,
canoeing, baseball – “always baseball,
never football.” |
|
|
According to Freudenburg,
the classics department is one of the oldest in the country and since
its inception in 1905 “has been one of the leading classics departments
in North America.”
Over the years, the department faculty has included such world-class
scholars as William Abbott Oldfather, Ben Edwin Perry and Alexander
Turyn.
Not to be outdone, “The current faculty has achieved an international
reputation in all areas of classical scholarship,” Freudenburg
said, and classics professors edit three periodicals: Illinois Classical
Studies and its Supplement and the Journal of Coptic Studies.
Despite its stellar accomplishments, the department also “has
had something of a history of extreme and sometimes outlandish professors,”
Freudenburg said.
 |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Cartoon
of William Abbott Oldfather. |
|
|
For example, there
was Revilo P. Oliver, “a pundit on the far right who was hung
in effigy on the Quad in 1964 for having invented a now-infamous conspiracy
theory regarding President John Kennedy’s assassination,”
Freudenburg said.
And there was Oldfather, “a brilliant scholar who basically invented
the department as a player on the national scene and who did much to
build the library’s holdings.”
Oldfather played many roles on campus, Freudenburg said. For example,
Oldfather founded “The Walking Club.” From 1909 until his
death in 1945, he led a group of scholars every Saturday into the woods
for singing, hiking, canoeing, baseball – “always baseball,
never football.”
In fact, the members of the club met at the local train station at noon
“thereby studiously avoiding the mayhem of Illini football.”
According to Freudenburg,
the club was huge and had its own songbook, cartoons and alums.
Unfortunately, Oldfather met his death during one of the club’s
outings. Late one Sunday afternoon in May of 1945 he attempted to shoot
his canoe over a knee-high dam in the Salt Fork River near Homer, Ill.
An expert canoeist, he had done this many times at this spot, but this
time, the canoe capsized. Attempting to retrieve his gear, Oldfather
was drawn under the dam by a powerful back current. His body was found
nine hours later.
As tragic and untimely as Oldfather’s death was, “He died
doing something that he loved and in the company of friends with whom
he shared a passion for exploration and for wandering off the beaten
path,” Freudenburg said.
William M. Calder III, the Oldfather Professor at Illinois, will speak
at 1:40 p.m. on “Solid Stuff: William Abbott Oldfather and Illinois
Classics.” Calder is a world-renowned expert on Greek religion
and epigraphy, Greek and Roman tragedy and the history of modern classical
scholarship.
Other topics and speakers – all from the U. of I. except where
noted, include:
• 1:30 p.m., welcome and opening remarks, Freudenburg;
• 2:20 p.m., “A Library to Live In,” Danuta Shanzer,
classics and medieval studies, and Bruce Swann, classics librarian;
• 3:30 p.m, “Myth for the Masses: Life Onstage at the U.
of I.,” S. Douglas Olson, classical and near eastern studies,
University of Minnesota;
• 4:10 p.m., “Classical Allusions of the Present and Future,”
Jon Solomon;
• 4:50 p.m., “Notes From the Archives and Closing Remarks,”
Freudenburg;
• 5 p.m., opening of the Classics display;
• 6 p.m., public reception
|
 |
 |
|