I have a question.
I had the great good fortune to go to one of the best small colleges in the nation, routinely ranked among the nation's most desirable by Newsweek’s annual poll. It’s a school that honors great teachers and encourages and develops critical thinking.
Part of our reunion gift my old college class is planning to donate to the college is an outdoor kinetic sculpture by George Rickey, entitled Double L Eccentric Gyratory.
It's a beautiful, graceful piece stirred in surprising ways by the slightest breath of wind. Two stainless steel L shapes are poised on a fulcrum and move slowly, or not, seemingly responding to the forces of another world. Or, if you prefer, two angular shapes, separate and identical, graciously and powerfully demonstrate emotional equilibrium. Or, if you prefer, some other metaphor like courtship. It is a sculpture that inspires thought.
It’s also a very large sculpture, 26 feet high and weighing several tons. It's currently in front of the San Francisco Public Library. And previously exhibited at the Pepsico sculpture garden in Purchase, NY.
The cost of purchasing, uprooting, transporting and installing this sculpture is estimated to be around $700,000.
The cost of purchasing, uprooting, transporting and installing this sculpture is estimated to be around $700,000.
Which brings us to our dilemma.
A small school in the village of Bodh Gaya in the poorest part of India, sponsored by One World Children’s Fund will feed and educate a child for $4 a month. If you do the math, you’ll find that $700,000 will teach reading, writing and arithmetic and feed, some 14,500 children for a year. That's many times more than the little school in Bodh Gaya could handle but you see my point.
A small school in the village of Bodh Gaya in the poorest part of India, sponsored by One World Children’s Fund will feed and educate a child for $4 a month. If you do the math, you’ll find that $700,000 will teach reading, writing and arithmetic and feed, some 14,500 children for a year. That's many times more than the little school in Bodh Gaya could handle but you see my point.
The need of children stuck in poverty in America and around the world is infinite. The sculpture is beautiful. If the $700,000 were yours to give, which would you choose? Please feel free to comment.