I've been dancing for
quite a while. I learned Plus while I was still in high school, with the Wilmette
club, "Fascinating Singles." Classes at that club went fast. Each year we had
two complete BMP classes, one January to May, and the other August to December.
Although they folded years ago, I still have fond memories. I
only danced occasionally as an undergraduate in upstate New York, and although
I returned to Chicago for graduate school in 1991, I barely danced for the next
few years. But then at the Gay Pride parade in 1994, I marched with other graduate
students, and, by chance, we were just in front of Chi-Town Squares. I was bleeding
slightly from a cut in my forehead, because on the way to the parade I had walked
into a light post. Yes, a light post. People in Chi-Town squares wondered out
loud whether they really wanted to dance with such a klutz. But then, first impressions
aren't everything. With
Chi-Town Squares, I learned Advanced from Lin Jarvis in one of his last Advanced
classes. (Soon after, John Oldfield began to teach Advanced, and Lin taught only
the BMP class.) Before I knew it, I was learning the challenge levels. For about
four years, I was in one of Sandie Bryant's weekly workshops, in which I learned
C3A and C3B. I did leave the workshop for a time, though, when I was a Peace Corps
volunteer in Kenya. Becoming
a caller had interested me for years-I actually signed up for caller school in
1995, but didn't go through with it. Even so, Lin Jarvis let me do two guest tips,
a singing call (in 1996) and a full tip at Chi-Town's Halloween dance in 2001.
In January 2002, I began calling the review for Lin's BMP class, and things took
off from there. Most years through 2006 I continued to call review sessions for
Chi-Town's Advanced or C-1 classes. I
moved from calling occasional tips to full dances. Locally I have called for Chi-Town
Squares, Recyclers, and Cloverleafs, and outside Chicago for Kansas City's Sho-Me
Squares and Saint Louis' Gateway Squares. I have also conducted many review and
workshop dances. By vocation a teacher, I enjoyed teaching a fourteen-week Advanced
level crash course in 2002 for a group of eight courageous Plus dancers. I have
annually attended caller schools of the Gay Callers Association since 2002, except
2005. I am a full member of Callerlab, the international association of square
dance callers, and a member of the Gay Callers Association. My
big interest other than square dancing is mathematics. I teach math at Truman
College, one of the City Colleges of Chicago. For some square dancers like me,
mathematics and square dancing are pretty much the same thing. If you see me talking
excitedly about something, it could be about a new square dance call or bit of
choreography, or it could be about a lecture on infinitesimal calculus or a book
on topology. But square
dancing has one major advantage over mathematics: it's all about a group of people
having fun together.
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