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Scene Again
1980 — The Iran Hostage Crisis

Feb. 13, 1980, was Day 102 of the hostage crisis in Tehran, Iran. But for globetrotting freelance journalist William Worthy ’42, it was just another day in just another post-revolution country.

In this photograph by Randy Goodman, William Worthy (center) sets up a question-answer session at a Tehran hotel with Hossein Sheikholislam (left) and Massoumeh Ebtekar (right), spokespeople for the students who held 52 U.S. diplomats hostage for 444 days.

Ebtekar, often interviewed by U.S. journalists during the crisis, was dubbed “Screaming Mary” by the media. Now a professor of immunology in Tehran, she talked to Matt Lauer of the Today Show last September about the status of women in her country. Sheikholislam, meanwhile, became Iran’s deputy foreign minister and ambassador to Syria.

As a journalist, Worthy was drawn to societies that had revolted against oppressive, U.S.-backed regimes. At the same time, he believed the U.S. media’s foreign coverage favored American interests. “You have to talk about the imperialist press when you talk about the mass media,” he told an MIT audience in 1973.

Perhaps because of this, Worthy had the U.S. government frequently nipping at his heels. In a well-publicized incident in the 1950s, he couldn’t get his passport renewed after traveling to off-limits China. To a Senate subcommittee investigating the affair in 1957, Worthy said, “I want my passport. And I want it now.”

Worthy, self-described as a pacifist and civil libertarian with a “rebel temperament,” never tired of the hassle nor wavered from a belief in the value of his work in a democratic society. For that, he recently received the Louis M. Lyons Award for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism from Harvard’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism.

Photographer Randy Goodman traveled with Worthy and recalls that “he just never rested. Sometimes I’d just want to get something to eat,” she laughs.

Worthy did eat — often while working. One night in Iran, he interviewed Hossein Sheikholislam over dinner, seeking insights into both the crisis and Iran’s Islamic Revolution. As Worthy later reported in The Boston Phoenix: “Martyrdom is a concept very dear.... If one is killed in the struggle, one’s ideas live on, and one’s work is picked up and carried to fruition by others.”

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Historically Black: Spelman and Morehouse colleges offer something that Bates can't — and that's just the point
The Wedding Gift: Friends and family raise a barn, and some community spirit, at the farmhouse wedding of Kirsten Walter '00 and Ben Ayers '99
It's a Microworld After All: MicroVest’s Gil Crawford ’80 takes the lead as private investors surge into the microfinance world
Brand Width: John Hassan '82 helps ESPN cover all the bases
Composition One-on-One: Students teach students as writing becomes an explicit value of the Bates curriculum
Of Climate, Clams, and Colleagues: Arctic clams are sentinels of climate change, says biology professor Will Ambrose. But he didn’t find that out by himself



Postcards from Bates: A few picture stories from the print issue
Bates Matters: THE BELIEVING GAME — Peer editing demands a desceptively simple act of faith
Open Forum: Opinions, stories, and comments from the Bates community
PreAmble: Balanced Beam
Quad Angles: A selection of news stories from the College
Scene Again: 1980 — The Iran Hostage Crisis
Sports Notes: A SMASHING RETURN — Tennis coach Paul Gastonguay '89 runs a program that wins matches and respect.
Connections: Crooning and Swooming — the Bates Deansmen celebrate 50 years with a campus gathering
Your Page: BOB'S JOB SAYS GOODBYE — “Your job has been outsourced to India.”
Vital Statistics: Honoring life's milestones
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