News

Remembering John Brisker, the Sonic who vanished in Africa

originally published on Crosscut.com on November 19, 2007

The mysterious, tragic disappearance and death of Northwest basketball star Tony Harris in Brazil brings to mind the mysterious, tragic disappearance (and presumed death) of retired Seattle SuperSonics forward John Brisker in Uganda 30 years ago. Unlike Harris, the John Brisker disappearance had a spiritual, picaresque quality, the adventurer-narrative of a lost soul journeying to a lost land. And then the soul vanishes. By 1978, John Brisker, who played for the Sonics from 1973-75, was adrift. Restless or not, angry or not, why did Brisker venture to the unstable purgatory of Uganda? Was he radicalized by a bloviating, charismatic Idi Amin? Post-colonial Africa was a politically fluid place, subject to demagogues and neo-utopians angling to fill the void of European hegemons. Brisker appeared to be a pilgrim of sorts, albeit a doomed one. Here’s what we know: Brisker was never heard from again after April 1978. He might have aligned himself with Amin, the glad-handing, cannibal dictator, and gotten himself killed during the post-Amin backlash. By 1985, Brisker was legally declared dead. In the Northwest, the Brisker disappearance fell into the pantheon of the curious and the unsolved. When I was a kid, it was D.B. CooperBigfootTed Bundy, the UFOs around Mount Rainier, and John Brisker. Could Brisker still be alive, afraid to show his face? Was he put into the FBI’s witness protection program, did he adopt a new identity, does he now work as a Smith Tower elevator operator? For a summer or two, Brisker was the Northwest-conspiracy version of what really happened to Amelia Earhart. Then, like so many things, we started to forget. We know this much: Neither Harris nor Brisker deserved to die, scared and alone, far from family in a faraway land. For an excellent piece on the Brisker saga, see Robert Jamieson’s Seattle Post-Intelligencer column from 2004.

The Pacifist Northwest: We’re the nation’s volunteer factory

originally published on Crosscut.com on July 29, 2007

In April, Ronald Tschetter swept into Seattle to trumpet the No. 1 ranked Huskies. At the University of Washington’s Kane Hall, undergrads and college pashas cheered as Tschetter presented a plaque to Provost Phyllis Wise. Tschetter is no health-care czar or NCAA exec. He’s the director of the Peace Corps. This year, the UW unseated the University of Wisconsin as the top generator of Peace Corps volunteers [108K PDF]. The University of Oregon in Eugene placed sixth. Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., landed at No. 4 for medium-sized schools. In the small-college category, the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma was first, with five more Northwest schools scoring in the top 20: Gonzaga University of Spokane, Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Willamette University in Salem, Ore., Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., and the The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash. The UW’s distinction should hold indefinitely, boosted by powerhouse departments of forestry, engineering, and international studies, as well as an enterprising Peace Corps Master’s International program. Moreover, Washington state contributes the highest number of volunteers per capita to AmeriCorps, the domestic counterpart of the Peace Corps. Mix in international philanthropies, including the world’s largest foundation, and the pattern falls together like a pointillist drawing: The Northwest is a global heavyweight in public service. Fast-forward three years, when Congress announces the location of the new U.S. Public Service Academy, an Annapolis for national service, somewhere in Massachusetts or New York. We’ll shuffle around like self-flagellating pilgrims and mutter passive-aggressively that if life were fair, by God, the Northwest would have nabbed that sucker. Life isn’t fair, as all Nordic depressives know, especially in the Hobbesian world of American politics. That’s why lawmakers need to unite and exhibit some un-Lutheran hubris. If the U.S. Public Service Academy Act has legs, then the Northwest delegation needs to lock arms and bring home the academy bacon. We’ve got some work to do: S. 960, the U.S. Public Service Academy Act, has a dozen Senate co-sponsors, including Hillary Clinton of New York and Republicans Arlen Specter of Pennsylvannia and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas. As of July 26, there were exactly zero Northwest co-sponsors. The House version of the bill, H.R. 1671, has sixty co-sponsors including Oregon’s Pete DeFazio and Washington’s Jim McDermott. Only lion-lamb canoodling, including a kumbaya alliance between Eastern Washington’s conservative Rep. Doc Hastings and Seattle’s McDermott, can make this happen. But why not? Scoring a service academy will be worth the wince-inducing alliances – not to mention that service is inherently nonpartisan. Academy creators want it in Washington, D.C., where students can grow fluent in bureaucratese and experience K Street Machiavellianism up close. A very bad idea. Meanwhile, maybe at last the Northwest’s service ethic is getting its due. There’s an effort under way called the Global State of Washington that aims to promote regional NGOs doing good works internationally. This group has generated some eye-watering stats, identifying more than 350 Washington nonprofits working overseas, almost 300 businesses advancing 400-plus initiatives, and 124 university centers with an international bent. Academics can debate whether the Northwest’s do-gooder-ism is a middle-aged expression of Baby Boom idealism or a mix of fine universities, or the legacy of FDR’s Civilian Conservation Corps and the WPA, or hell-fearing Scandinavians, or the natural extension of Mother Joseph and the Sisters of Providence. It probably doesn’t matter. What matters is that the global citizen/volunteer culture is part of our social fabric. It should become part of the Northwest narrative as well.