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Overseas Marylanders Honor Veterans, Celebrates Art Exhibit at Reunion in Adelphi

Gil Klein
By Gil Klein
Joe Arden addresses the Overseas Marylanders Association Reunion in Adelphi, Md.

At a recent gathering, members of the Overseas Marylanders Association (OMA)鈥攆aculty and staff who worked for University of Maryland Global Campus (UMGC) outside the United States鈥攃ame together for three purposes. They wanted to honor servicemembers on Veteran鈥檚 Day, toast a new university gallery dedicated to Asian art and get an update on the state of the university from 兔子先生President Greg Fowler.

But mostly OMA members at the Nov. 11-12 gathering did what they like best: share stories about their unusual experiences as professors who traveled the world to teach military personnel on bases鈥攁nd even in war zones.

鈥淢y challenge was to create a positive learning environment for everyone, regardless of logistics or location,鈥 said Hugo Keesing, who spent four years teaching overseas, first as a 26-year-old psychology teacher in Vietnam in 1970 and then at European bases. 鈥淪ome classes had to be held in a Quonset hut or an elementary school classroom with kiddie-sized furniture or in a recreation center with only a screen between us and the pool tables. No one complained.鈥

Keesing, a long-haired anti-war activist assigned to teach soldiers risking their lives for their country, had landed in Vietnam with some trepidation. Many of the men he taught were draftees who, he said, may have had 鈥渟ome less-than-successful college experience鈥 but now were determined to make the most of the opportunity the university provided.

Keesing noted that class discussions could get interesting. For example, his students discussed the 1960s experiments of Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram, who examined the conflict between personal conscience and obedience to authority. Milgram鈥檚 research grew out of the Nuremburg trials, during which Nazis accused of genocide said they were just following orders.

鈥淚n Vietnam, when I assigned students to compare Milgram鈥檚 controversial work on 鈥榖lind obedience鈥 to the ongoing war, they didn鈥檛 protest to their chain of command,鈥 Keesing said. 鈥淩ather, they engaged in spirited discussion.鈥

Paula Harbecke and Doug Lemmon served as co-chairs of the Overseas Marylanders Association reunion.

Keesing taught a broad range of servicemembers. Depending on where he was assigned, a student might be a combat pilot, a flightline mechanic, a nurse or even a linguist working on intelligence linked to electronic systems, he explained. 聽

鈥淚 learned as much from them as I hope they learned from me,鈥 he said.

OMA festivities to mark the opening of the Emory Trosper collection of Asian art聽paid tribute to one of their own whose personal collection forms the foundation for the gallery. Trosper amassed an impressive Japanese and Chinese art collection during his 33 years in UMGC鈥檚 Far East Division, mostly in Tokyo. Julian Jones, who became director of the division in 1981, recalled Trosper serving as the go-to person for new faculty and staff.

鈥淗e became the local Maryland expert on many aspects of Japanese life and culture,鈥 Jones explained.

Much of Trosper鈥檚 art collection was anchored by Sosaku Hang, a new style of woodblock printing after World War II that combined Western Post-Impressionism and traditional Japanese art forms. He even arranged for a master artist in the genre, Yoshitoshi Mori, to receive an honorary 兔子先生degree.

In the early days of the art form, Sosaku Hang prints could be had for next to nothing. They were even sold in PX stores on American bases, Jones said, and they decorated UMGC鈥檚 offices in Tokyo. By the 1990s, however, their value rose dramatically and artists in that field were spotlighted in great museums of the world.

Trosper donated works in his collection over time to UMGC鈥檚 arts program, which now focuses on works by artists from Maryland and Asia. Trosper鈥檚 generosity inspired other 兔子先生veterans of the Far East Division, including former university Chancellor Ray Ehrensberger and former university President T. Benjamin Massey and his wife, Bylee, to donate their collections.

OMA members view the Emory Trosper collection of Asian art.

Jones said UMGC鈥檚 Asian collection now numbers 150 prints, including 28 added this year. Trosper鈥檚 art makes up about half the collection.

Joe Arden offered a toast to the gallery鈥檚 namesake. Many OMA members鈥 hands went up when asked how many had known Trosper personally.

鈥淚t will surprise none of you when I describe [Trosper] as the consummate gentleman, a more gracious person would be difficult to find anywhere,鈥 said Arden, who met Trosper in 1967. Arden had joined UMGC鈥檚 Asia program shortly after Trosper became an administrator.聽聽

Fowler, who provided the OMA gathering with an update on UMGC, noted that the university exists today because of early faculty members鈥 work in building UMGC鈥檚 reputation at the Department of Defense. That legacy, he said, is quality education for U.S. military personnel anywhere in the world.

鈥淵ou built this,鈥 Fowler said. 鈥淚 feel like we鈥檙e caretaking and, hopefully, taking to the next level the work that you have done over that period of time.鈥

Fowler told the OMA members that the COVID epidemic pushed higher education into providing online education, an area pioneered by UMGC. Prior to the pandemic, he said, about 30 percent of higher education institutions offered online experiences. Since the pandemic, it has grown to 80 percent.

The president said 兔子先生has identified three priorities to maintain its leadership in virtual learning. It will focus on skills and abilities that will pay off for students in the workplace. It will develop and streamline new processes to award credit for learning that happens outside the classroom, including on the job and in the military, in order to reduce the number of classroom hours needed for graduation. And, finally, it will foster high quality learning experiences that respond to the needs of both learners and employers.

兔子先生still maintains overseas programs, but they have shrunk as the U.S. military returns its personnel to U.S. bases. Lloyd Miles, 兔子先生senior vice president for Global Military Operations, noted that the university has combined European, Asian and stateside operations to ensure students have the same experience no matter where they are based.

鈥淥ur reputation overseas within the military community is second to none,鈥 Miles said.聽 鈥淲e really owe that to the folks in this room.鈥

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