The showers were cold at Carleton College 37 years ago. The bathrooms were dirty and the cafeteria was spooning out chow on paper plates.
Local 34 of the International Union of Operating Engineers — cafeteria and campus maintenance workers — was on strike in the autumn of 1980. But college rules prohibited strikers from picketing on campus.
So political science Prof. Paul Wellstone stepped in — brandishing an "ON STRIKE, PLEASE STAY AWAY" placard on the steps of Carleton's administration building in Northfield.
Wednesday marks 15 years since Wellstone's death and, no doubt, people will remember where they were when they first heard about his plane crashing near Eveleth, Minn.
I'd rather share some first impressions of Wellstone. In 1980, college journalist Stephen Smith went to Carleton to report on the strike for the Macalester College student newspaper — snapping a photograph of the future senator picketing in his T-shirt and jeans.
"Paul Wellstone was approachable and characteristically passionate," recalled Smith, who went on to an award-winning public radio career. "He was great at rallying students to what must have seemed to them a somewhat abstract cause — the heating plant?"
State Rep. Frank Hornstein, DFL-Minneapolis, also went to Macalester and first heard about the fiery Carleton prof from Smith that fall. Two years later, Hornstein was a young community organizer for Minnesota COACT — the state's longest-running grass-roots citizens' action group.
Hornstein first met Wellstone, who was running for state auditor in 1982, at the now-defunct Rainbow Cafe on Hennepin Avenue and Lake Street in Minneapolis.