In this digital age, interconnectivity is at an unprecedented high. There is honestly no way to know who’s out there and who will stumble upon your blog – which is what this post is about.
I started this blog as a hybrid of literature reviews and news pertaining to the state of N.J. Because I am the current editor-in-chief of Avant, Rowan University’s undergraduate literary magazine, I had plenty of information to share that seemed relevant to my topic, including submission dates and guidelines for the magazine and readings we conducted.
A few days after publishing a post about Avant’s open MIC reading scheduled for Rowan Day, I received an unexpected response from the first ever editor-in-chief of the magazine, Tyson Kinsell.
I was shocked, really, seeing as I’ve had no contact with former staff members since joining the club my freshman year. I took up the position of editor-in-chief in the fall semester of 2008, my junior year, but the club still has no mailing list or way to contact former staff members.
After emailing him to thank him for his comment and interest in my blog, I decided this would be a perfect opportunity to gain a greater insight into the 50-year-old magazine I’m in charge of today.
I asked Kinsell if it would be all right to conduct a few phone interviews in order to write up a profile of him. He said yes.
This is his story.
Kinsell was born on June 7, 1932, in Philadelphia, P.A. He grew up in Vineland, N.J. and graduated from Vineland High School in 1950. He first attended Rowan University – then known as Glassboro State College – during the 1951-1952 school year.
He chose Glassboro State College because he had friends who were currently enrolled and because it was a small school, around 350 students as he recalls.
Kinsell, however, didn’t return the following year, and instead, he and his family moved to California.
During his time out West, he worked for a couple of months with an aircraft company called Douglas Aircraft. “At the time, the Korean War was on, hot and heavy,” says Kinsell. “It looked like the prospect was that I might be drafted. So I joined the air force.”
Kinsell applied and was accepted to the Aviation Cadet Program offered by the air force. Because of a backup of qualified applicants looking to become pilots, Kinsell joined the navigation section of the program and was later named a distinguished graduate of his class, entitling him to a regular commission and other benefits.
His first assignments were given in 1956 and brought him back to N.J., where he would work as a navigator aboard C-18 airplanes. “It was a fascinating experience,” says Kinsell. “I was flying all over the world from the McGuire air force base here in New Jersey.”
A year later, an unexpected motorcycle accident would change Kinsell’s life forever.
“It was due to a defect, I believe, in the machine,” says Kinsell. “I wasn’t going fast or anything… I lost control of it because the wheel had become loose. In losing control of it, I hit a tree – I guess I must have gone over the handlebars and hit my shoulder. Anyway, it paralyzed my left arm, which has remained paralyzed since that day in March of 1957.”
This disability, however, didn’t curb his ambition or work ethic.
Kinsell calls himself a fan of all the arts, including visual, musical, and written work. All were natural interests of his during his youth. He says he particularly enjoys Shakespeare and e.e cummings and that, through word of mouth, his family claims a familial relationship to Samuel Langhorn Clemens, more commonly known as Mark Twain. Little did he know, his peaking interests would accumulate into longstanding tradition that’s older than myself.
“I and several friends, including some people who subsequently went on to staff there at Glassboro… Antoinette Libro, Richard Ambacher, Byron Young, and several others… came together and were BS’ing one day and decided it’d probably be a good idea to create a literary magazine for Glassboro. We wanted to give some of the people interested in art and writing an outlet for their creative talents. So, we took the appropriate steps to get the faculty approval and a faculty advisor, and we started a magazine.”
Kinsell was the editor-in-chief of Avant Magazine for its first two years of existence, from 1959 through 1961. He dedicated all of his time to Avant, choosing not to work for the college’s other publications, Venue Magazine and The Whit.
“The greatest difficulty was to keep things somewhat organized. We had quite a few people who were interested in different things – spreading poetry, short stories, and other formats through the magazine. And we didn’t have a great deal of experienced people in art or the skills needed for putting the magazine together.”
Kinsell recalls the time he spent working on the magazine fondly, although he didn’t pursue editorial work after he graduated with the class of 1961. He later married his girlfriend at the time, who was a graduate of the class of 1962. They’ve been married for over forty years now.
Kinsell did a lot after receiving his degrees: traveling around the world; teaching social studies; owning several business, including a credit bureau, a construction company, and a campground in P.A. Currently, Kinsell is retired and lives in Forked River, N.J. Unfortunately, he’s had little contact with the college and the magazine over the years.
“I’ve seen very few [Avant’s] since then, and I’m kind of disappointed in that. There was some outreach ten years ago or so – there was a celebration of the thirty or forty years of Avant’s existence. The people in charge at the time tried to contact as many people as they could locate that had previously served on the staff of Avant. I was invited to attend this celebration. At that time I saw couple of the issues published since mine, but I’m not on a current mailing list or anything like that. I don’t have much of an idea what’s been going on.”
So what does this say about staff members of the various publications here at Rowan University?
I don’t think any of them are bad people necessarily, but I think that most of us get caught up in the daily grind and take history for granted. We need to realize that we didn’t start these organizations and that they’ve been passed down over the year because of the passion of those that came before us. We need to take the time to appreciate our origins, rather than let each graduating class increase the distance between originators, former members, and current members.
There are more people like Tyson Kinsell out there – and I’m sure they want to hear from us.