home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
122793
/
1227640.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
6KB
|
122 lines
<text id=93TT2285>
<title>
Dec. 27, 1993: American Scene
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ESSAY, Page 86
American Scene
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A Tale Of Five Warm Coats
</p>
<p>Jack E. White/New York
</p>
<p> Fifteen apparitions have I seen;
</p>
<p> The worst a coat upon a coat-hanger
</p>
<p>-- WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS
</p>
<p> A similar conscience-stirring hallucination seized stockbrokers
Larry Doyle and Terry Scott, management consultant Sheena Laughlin,
computer scientist Parviz Kermani and record-company executive
Bill Shaughnessy as they went through their closets. Hanging
there were winter coats they had not worn in years. Doyle's
gray-and-black herringbone was of an elegant European design
that he now considers a bit flashy. The vibrant blue of Laughlin's
five-year-old down coat had begun to fade. Kermani's dark blue
raincoat had become too tight. Shaughnessy thought the brown
trench with the bright red lining was starting to look like
Columbo's. Scott had purchased a new, gold-colored overcoat
to replace the sturdy dark gray mohair that sheltered him through
years of commuting from Fairfield, Connecticut.
</p>
<p> Conventional wisdom says New Yorkers are afflicted by compassion
fatigue, the dispiriting belief that since nothing will solve
the problems of the poor and homeless, nothing should even be
attempted. But the disease, if it exists at all, does not extend
to owners of winter coats during the Christmas season. Far better,
these five and tens of thousands of others have concluded, for
their unused garment to be on the back of some shivering soul.
</p>
<p> The same vision came to Elizabeth Yanish Shwayder, a sculptor
from Denver, 11 years ago. Visiting her daughter in Toronto,
she learned of that city's annual coat drive, which collects
used winterwear and gives it to the needy. In 1982, as Denver
suffered through a horrific winter storm, Shwayder brought the
concept home. Seven years later, the coat drive had become a
Denver institution, and Shwayder decided to go national. Her
first target was New York City.
</p>
<p> Shwayder contacted Suzanne Davis, who worked for the J.M. Kaplan
Fund. The foundation, in turn, enlisted the New York City police
department and New York Cares, an innovative organization whose
philosophy, according to executive director Kenneth Adams, is
to create ways "for time-starved but civic-minded New Yorkers
to take part in hands-on volunteer projects so there are no
more excuses." This effort to combat compassion fatigue mainly
involves scheduling activities like manning soup kitchens after
regular business hours so that potential do-gooders can pitch
in. But, Adams stresses, the key is for volunteers to feel they
really make a difference in the lives of the downtrodden. The
coat drive was ideal. It keeps its promise to give the coats
to needy people in a matter of days. Donors can get a warm,
cozy feeling inside by simply cleaning out their closets.
</p>
<p> It worked even better than Shwayder hoped. In its first year
the New York coat drive distributed 10,000 winter coats. This
year the goal is 75,000. The coats are collected in boxes at
police precincts and bank branches, at more than 50 companies
and at major commuter points like Grand Central station. There
New York Cares has set up a display of coats from such celebrities
as New York Knicks star Charles Smith (a towering blue worsted)
and Mayor-elect Rudolph Giuliani (a staid gray tweed) to tweak
the conscience of suburbanites. The coats are turned over to
200 agencies around the city to be given to those who need them.
New York Cares says it costs less than $1 a coat.
</p>
<p> Doyle's herringbone, along with the coats of Scott, Kermani,
Shaughnessy and Laughlin, winds up at Our House, a social-services
center attached to St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Chelsea,
where condominium-dwelling yuppies coexist with derelicts who
call a cardboard box home. Our House's director, Pamela Bradley,
says this year the center has given 600 coats to people for
whom "having one can make the difference between making it through
the winter or freezing to death." Outside the church 20 men
and women wait patiently in a cold drizzle for the doors to
open. They will be admitted one at a time to choose among scores
of coats arrayed across the pews.
</p>
<p> All five coats are taken in less than 15 minutes. Kermani's
raincoat and Shaughnessy's rumpled trench are snatched up by
a man who will not give his name. Another nameless man struts
out the door, his dishevelment suddenly transformed into dapperness
by Doyle's herringbone. Clarence ("Larry") Locke, 56, lives
in a welfare hotel on the Upper West Side. He pulls Terry Scott's
gray mohair on over his tattered lightweight jacket and finds
it fits him perfectly. "I am a gentleman, you know, and now
I look like one," he says, running a hand over the thick material.
And, indeed, he does.
</p>
<p> The most exuberant recipient is Sondra Richardson, a slender
34-year-old woman who lives on the sidewalk in a shipping container
with her fiance Perry Turner. Her only coat is a bedraggled
red corduroy. She slips on Sheena Laughlin's blue down and,
proclaiming that "I used to be a model," strikes a series of
runway poses. "Sheena, God bless you, honey, and have a merry,
merry Christmas and a beautiful New Year," says Sondra, then
zippers up the coat and scurries out, on Perry's arm, into the
damp and bleakness of the December afternoon.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>