Friday, January 29, 2010

* History: The Grotesque Vampire?





















Pro-life group struggles to find place on liberal campus
By Baobao Zhang
Staff Reporter

The Yale Daily News
Published Monday, January 25, 2010


WASHINGTON, D.C. — Outside the U.S. Supreme Court, speakers blared with the frantic strums of guitars and the voices of four young men singing gospel songs — rock and roll style. Donning shaggy beards and seated on a makeshift stage, the four were among thousands of pro-life activists protesting the 37th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion.
Out on the streets, a small band of Yale students led a different chant.
“Glory, glory, hallelujah! In the beauty of the lilies, Christ was born across the sea,” the Yalies’ voices sang in harmony,...





By http://sexandabortion.blogspot.com January 29, 2010

Nobody KNOWS.
That's the fact of the matter: Not the Supreme Court; not the Pope; not the Pro-life folks; not the Pro-choice folks.

As a culture, the uncertainty of NOT KNOWING that abortion is NOT ENDING A HUMAN LIFE has resulted in tens of millions of acts committed since Roe v. Wade became law which we do not KNOW are NOT MURDER.

The question is, can any culture bear such a weight of uncertainty without paying a debt of terrible guilt in the collective unconscious?

Isn't that the question of The Waste Land and the twentieth century itself: the bloodiest century in human history?

Or is history a groteque vampire?

Paul Keane
M.Div'80
http://theantiyale.blogspot.com/



#61 By @ #59 5:16p.m. on January 30, 2010


I agree that the situation isn't exactly the same, but my central point is that you're making a judgement call as to the value of a life. This isn't surprising, it's something each and every one of us does every day.

For example, in sub-Saharan Africa, millions of children die from a lack of simple, cheap immunizations. According to some data (if you want, I'll post it), you could immunize a child for as little as $5 - $20, thereby saving a life. In other words, in about two weeks' time, instead of spending $60 on some flowers which will fade quickly for Valentine's Day for a loved on, you could -save several lives-. But who amongst us does that? Sure, we may do something, but who amongst us spends every penny earned savings lives in this manner? Not many of us, I'm sure. And why? Perhaps because it's easy on paper to say all lives are equal in worth, but the sad reality is that our own choices don't reflect that.

I don't think these are simple issues, but I know that it would be hypocritical of me to judge abortion, something I don't like at all, when I'm typing this on a laptop I bought with money that could've fed a child, protected him from some dread disease, etc. If you view the unborn as a life, then the only difference is that the path above will indirectly result in a death via inaction, rather than a direct act of death via action. But if you believe a life is lost, does that really matter? And if you aren't sure that the fetus is a life, isn't the loss of millions of lives to malnutrition a more pressing concern?

I make my choices and prefer to let others make theirs, with as little judgement as possible. I certainly don't have all the answers.



#64 By * Is there a Collective Societal Unconscious? 8:29a.m. on January 31, 2010


#61 says:And if you aren't sure that the fetus is a life, isn't the loss of millions of lives to malnutrition a more pressing concern?

My point is that there is an Societal Collective Unconscious which is wounded by 20 million acts of UNCERTAINTY about whether or not they constitute murder.

Even today's New York Times Magazine has an article whose title acknowledges the possibility of such an unconscious reaction, albeit to the environment:

"Is There an Ecological Unconscious?
By DANIEL B. SMITH
A branch of psychology says that there is — and that ignoring it puts not just the planet but also our minds at risk."

And what about the risk to our minds from the number of possible "deaths" which triples or quadruples the number of victims of the WWII death camps?

Paul Keane
M.Div'80
http://theantiyale.blogspot.com/


#65 By @ #64 7:55p.m. on January 31, 2010

Paul, perhaps the best response to that article comes from its own text, on page 2:
"But ecopsychology embraces a more revolutionary paradigm: just as Freud believed that neuroses were the consequences of dismissing our deep-rooted sexual and aggressive instincts, ecopsychologists believe that grief, despair and anxiety are the consequences of dismissing equally deep-rooted ecological instincts."
Now, go find a bunch of reputable psychologists and ask them how many feel that Freudian notions are on the right track.
Some Buddhists believe that killing even insects is wrong. Some Jains even wear masks over their faces in an attempt to not even kill germs. To these people, a loss of ANY life is bad, and leads to bad karma. Have you killed any insects lately? Maybe rolled over some ants while driving? Flattened a spider in your home? If so, do you feel the negative karma you've created, according to that world-view?
I imagine you don't, and I feel similarly with regards to your notion of a collective unconscious that feeds negatively off the possible deaths from abortion.



#67 By Further unknitting the ravell'd sleeve of care 1:56a.m. on February 1, 2010
To @ # 64:

I appreciate your thoughtful ideas.

"There are no accidents in the life of the mind". This is the Freudian axiom which more adequately explains human "being" than any other axiom: theological, biological, psychological.

Whether or not current fads in professional psychology and psychiatry
endorse Freud or reject Freud, is irrelevant to me.

My own many decades now of life intersecting with thousands of people confirm that axiom as the operative dynamic in human behavior.

As Lincoln said "For every drop of blood from the lash, a drop of blood from the sword" to explain "Providence" permitting the bloodshed of the Civil War, so too our epoch may conclude: for every possible life from the scalpal, a possible day of guilt and anxiety (O full of scorpions is my mind).

That's 20 million days and counting.

Macbeth hath murdered sleep.

Paul Keane
M.Div'80
http://theantiyale.blogspot.com


#68 By "PK" is anti-abortion? 8:58a.m. on February 1, 2010

"for every possible life from the scalpal [sic], a possible day of guilt and anxiety."

So........ given that embryonic blood is shed in an abortion, this means...?


#69 By blackwood 3:33p.m. on February 1, 2010

paul keane,
you must widen your gaze. At midday tomorrow, the theoretical world as you know it shall end.


#70 By Ugh 5:18p.m. on February 1, 2010
#69

It has already ended. I am recapitulating a lost world: in recherche du temps perdu.

The world of tomorrow is Beyonce and Oprah and Ellen and Dr. Oz and Entertainment Tonight 24/7 on your ipad.

It is text messaging $10 to 900999 Haiti while you fail to notice your Toyota accelerator pedal sticking to the floor;
it is climate change turning Old Campus into New Haven Harbor with Harkness Hall as a lighthouse.
It is the apotheosis of Science and Math and the death of the Liberal Arts.

It is the world we made for you. Ugh.

#71 By @ PK (Re: #67) 9:20p.m. on February 1, 2010


Paul, an off-the-cuff analogy would place Freud's relationship to psychology as somewhat akin to Aristotle's relationship with physics. That is, it was a profound step towards our understanding of the nature of the field, but has been (thankfully) superceded by newer ideas that are far closer to reality.

And, with respect, the notion that your life experience confirms your axiom about human nature is no more accurate than (say) the life experience of a friend of mine, who believes in earnest that every facet of human nature is driven by money, confirms his theory. In both cases, I think it's fair to assume there may be an element of truth, but it's far from the whole picture.

In fact, determinism is an interesting choice for you, since if every 'action' in the mind has a deterministic precursor, then where does free will fit in?

Finally, it might be worthwhile to consider the idea that the 'guilt and anxiety' you may feel from possible deaths due to abortion is self-inflicted. Similar in many ways to the guilt some Catholics feel about premarital sex. If you're taught to feel it, you do, but if you're not, you don't.

And not to inflict more guilt upon you, but I'm curious where your 20 million number comes from? The statistics I've seen show far higher numbers.


#72 By @ Ugh (#70) 9:37p.m. on February 1, 2010

Assuming you are PK again, I think I now see the problem - you see the glass of the world as half-empty rather than half-full. Or, maybe more accurately, some error in vision lets you see the glass as almost entirely empty whereas many others see it nearly overflowing.

I certainly won't convince you otherwise, but I for one find it tremendously impressive that (to take one example) in the face of disaster, millions of people can help send much-needed relief supplies simply by entering a few digits on their phone. What can you possibly dislike about that? Is it that it 'feels' impersonal? If so, I understand the sentiment - it seems so trivial, doesn't it? But I would think it's balanced out by the idea that the people receiving aid care more about their meals, shelter and medical aid than they do about how a person hundreds or thousands of miles away 'feels' about the manner in which such aid was donated.

In cases like this, I think it's usually better to think of the end result rather than the manner in which it was reached.



#73 By History: The grotesque vampire

71:
Catholic guilt? Hardly. Purely secular. You must be a lot younger than I am or you slept through the last five decades. We were sytematically schooled in the guilt and shame a society should feel for its complicity of silence over; the Nazi death camps; Jim Crowe discrimination; insitutional racism and institutional sexism; country-club anti-semitism, etc.

It's not just MY life experience: Take two famous cases; the deaths of Princess Diana and JFK Jr. The former a death wish if there ever was one(the laws of physics do not apply to pincesses; I need not fasten my seat belt), the latter the epitome of the oedipal battle (I must outdo my father's world-wide-attention-rivetting death).

Not determinism. One can analyze and predict the behavior of the mind and outwit it. Most of us are sleepwalking from our childhood until a death, divorce, unrequited love etc. wakes us from our slumber. What we do with that awakening is free choice. Most of us resume sleepwalking, including princess Diana and JFK Jr.



I just guessed at 20 million.

History is a grotesque vampire, n'est-ce-pas?

PK
M.Div.'80

#74 By Rhetorical coccoon

72:
Believe me, every fiber of my being sees the glass half full, NO MATTER WHAT!( A little bout with removing half a cancerous kidney last year taught me that.)

I just got a little intoxicated with my own prose and couldn't resist the image
of someone risking his/her life and others' lives by texting and driving while simultaneously engaging in a philanthropic act.

Forgive me. I do tend to go on . . .

Best,

PK
M.Div.'80

PS

This is supremely egotistical I know, but I do consider the effort I put into jousting with these posts an act of generational philanthropy. It would be easier to let you all live in the solipsism of your own generation's rhetorical coccoon (sp?)

I am sure this bit of self-indulgence on my part will engender some raised eyebrows if not more.


#75 By * Nine Jars; Free speech or desecration? 2:45p.m. on February 6, 2010


Remember those nine jars on display in Yale's open-to-the-public Peabody Museum in the 1950's (two blocks from the 24/7 Rosary being recited by kneeling Roman Catholics on the sidewalk in front of the Orange Street Planned Parenthood as Griswold was making its way through the courts)? The recipe for explosion was clear.

Nine jars. One for every month. From tiny to football sized. Each jar had on display a gestating human, from zygote to
embryo to fetus.

The display disappeared. If the Daily News had a flair for history and an eye for imagery as well as their excellent nose for News it would find an investigative reporter who could uncover photos of that display, and then trace whatever happened to it. Is it on a shelf in the Peabody Store Room still?

Has it been destroyed in shame? Or fear of litigation?

Was it an act of terrorism on women?

Paul Keane
M. Div. '80


#76 By PS to Nine Jars 3:13p.m. on February 6, 2010


PS
Talk about "skeletons" in a closet!






* Goose-Stepping to the Top and a National Curriculum



















School reform looking for federal funds

By Esther Zuckerman
Staff Reporter
The Yale Daily News

Published Friday, January 29, 2010

Federal eduction spending could rise 6 percent in 2011, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced Wednesday, and that’s good news for New Haven’s eduction reform plans.Though national spending overall will be frozen, Duncan said if the proposed 2011 White House budget passes, federal funds for education will increase — a move that comes as New Haven kicks its education reform efforts into high gear. Just last week, Mayor John DeStefano Jr. discussed two major federal grants the city may qualify for, Investing in Innovation and Race to the Top, at a meeting about education...


#1 By Goose-stepping to ETS's National Curriculum 5:15a.m. on January 29, 2010

Let's not kid ourselves. It's the money, stupid!
If it helps the kids, that will be an accidental bonus.
If it doesn't, the kids will be yet again guinea pigs in adults' fantasy that there is a recipe for creating educated human beings.
All we have to do is follow the recipe---in this case add benchmarks and rubrics, stir, bake in a 4T school (Teach To The Test) for twelve years and voila: educated human beings emerge, goose-stepping their way to college where they can genuflect once again at the altar of the ETS (Educational Testing Service) for four, six, even eight more years.

This isn't a Race to the Top it is Goose-Stepping to the Top. The real agenda is hidden: A NATIONAL CURRICULUM.
Heil Duncan!
Humbug! Tommyrot! Balderdash! Baloney!(Bologna!)
PKM.Div.'80http://theantiyale.blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

* Rushing the Roses














School reform still evolving in New Haven
By Esther Zuckerman
Staff Reporter
The Yale Daily News
Published Wednesday, January 27, 2010



The phrase “It takes a city” is all over New Haven — on buttons with red-and-white lettering handed out at press events, on bumper stickers displayed in the offices of New Haven Public Schools employees, even hanging above the Cooperative Arts and Humanities High School on College Street.
It is the catchphrase of the city’s new comprehensive school reform initiative, an ambitious undertaking by Mayor John DeStefano Jr. that made national headlines after the teachers’ union and city agreed on a ground-breaking four-year contract in October.
Hailed by national leaders from...

#1 By As any mother knows you cannot ruah a rose. 5:15a.m. on January 27, 2010

THE MOST IMPORTANT THING IN TEACHING IS THE RAPPORT --THE RELATIONSHIP --THE TEACHER ESTABLISHES WITH STUDENTS.

Anxious, unhappy, frazzled, over-evaluated teachers will result in anxious, unhappy, frazzled, over-evaluated kids. Happy, fulfilled, passionate teachers have a chance to inspire students to happiness, fulfillment and passion.

Remember, we are dealing with a precious, easily molded prize here: children.

God help the children when know-it-all outsiders start evaluating the classroom with the fantasy that children are a recipe whose ingredients can be modified and baked under finely tuned conditions.

Such thinking approaches hubris .

Children are sacred. Handle with care and awe.

As any mother knows, you cannot rush a rose (no matter how many evaluation systems Obama's Race to the Top puts in place).

PK
M.Div.'80
htpp://theantiyale.blogspot.com



#2 By Nancy 8:24a.m. on January 27, 2010

James Comer (Yale) and the Comer School Development Program - perfect model. Also, NHPS needs to truly put 'Kids First'.

#3 By Jas.McH. 4:15p.m. on January 27, 2010


One of the more well-researched & thoughtfully written tomes on this subject matter to date...JMcH.

Note: Good incorporation of meaningful/relevant data as well.

P.S. The extended educational community would do well to never underestimate the near & long term value/importance of Reflective Practices.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

* Ed U. Cation




















Forum probes Conn. education
By Tom Stanley-Becker

Contributing Reporter
The Yale Daily News
Published Monday, January 25, 2010


More than 400 people, including Connecticut state legislators and parents, students and education experts from across the country, descended on the Law School on Saturday afternoon for a town hall meeting and symposium about education reform.
At the four-hour conference, titled “The New Politics of Education Reform: Real Change for Communities of Color,” 12 speakers and panelists offered a broad range of proposals for how to close the education achievement gap between African-American and Latino students and white suburban students. Policy suggestions included strengthening...

#1 By Smuggle it in 5:13a.m. on January 25, 2010


Watch what students are interested in and smuggle it in to the curriculum: cell phones; ipods; video;YouTube.

Smuggle is the key word. You don't throw out the curriculum and replace it with these devices you ADD these devices TO the surriculum.

For instance: practicing definitions for any class can be turned inot to game by dividing the class into two teams. Each team has a cell phone and the teacher "borrows" a cell phone from a third student. The first team to correctly text message the definition and spelling of the term to the teacher phone "wins".

Dramatize a few lines from a text (even a math text). Have the kids video the "dramatic production" on a cell phone. Deposit the video on the teacher's computer. Show the result on the computer (or wall screen if the computer is hooked up to a projector.) Entire process takes 12 minutes.

Allow students to listen to their iPods when working silently in class, as long as they WORK. No more than one minute on
"menu search".

Reward the class with a bribe: You (ENTIRE class) work 40 minutes, you get 5 minutes down-time at end of class with cell phone/iPod privileges.

Paul Keane
M.Div.'80
http://theantiyale.blogspot.com

#2 By PS : Smuggle it in 5:31a.m. on January 25, 2010


PS If students do not have (for economic or other reasons: school rules?) any of the tech devices mentioned (cell phones; iPods; video camera) use teacher's cell phone video option and create a classroom video for YouTube.(Rehearse famous moments in history; literature; mathematics; science; foreign langauage with translation). YouTube accepts 9 minute videos. Convert video to MP4 and submit. BINGO!
GUARANTEED student interest and involvement.


#3 By Active.Urban.Instructor 11:22p.m. on January 25, 2010

#1 & #2:

R U for real?......W/all due respect, sir, a less than naive teacher would not enable such behavior so as to not be complicit (a.)in a student's ears getting damaged/blown out by the time that they're 21 yrs. old & (b.)create a cause to constantly call out &/or shout out(not to mention employing the use of others to get such a student's attention)whenever a need arises.
Rather: employ a zero tolerance school electronics policy.....w/violators NOT dealt with punitively, but simply & politely separated from their device which is subsequentally placed in a small, marked manilla envelop 'til the end of school day (or even beginning of next day if there are bus departure time constraint issues).
Alternative resolution: Employing the use of school PA system, allowing for exclusively instrumental background music(i.e. w/o lyrics!)of all types to be softly playing throughout the day (or @ least within the hallways & caf.)....."Now that's the anthem......."


#4 By Prohibit Prohibition 6:23a.m. on January 26, 2010

Go with the flow. Technology is here to stay. The challenge is to INTEGRATE it into the classroom. Prohibition turns teachers into cops, just as it turned the country into enforcers/violators. The discipline game then becomes the curriculum.
PK

Friday, January 22, 2010

* Etiquette Equals Economics




















Atticus charged with


discrimination




The Yale Daily News


By Colin Ross and Zoe Gorman
Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter
Published Friday, January 22, 2010



A showdown over race and discrimination is brewing at Atticus Bookstore and Café on Chapel Street.
In an announcement recently released to Atticus’s employees that opened with “Here we speak English,” the café’s management forbade employees from using foreign languages within earshot of customers. The policy, obtained by the News, further specified that employees could only speak Spanish in the prep and dishwasher areas.
The New Haven Workers Association, a group of local labor leaders and activists, condemned the policy as discriminatory Tuesday, as did Ward 15 Alderman Joseph...

#1 By Hospitality vs.Freedom? 5:28a.m. on January 22, 2010

"We only speak English here" is highhanded and arrogant.

There is a larger issue here than racism and that is hospitality. When your hosts have a private language which they use in addition to the prevalent language of the culture, it leads one to wonder if the guests are being satirized to their faces without their knowing it.

I once attended a party hosted by a Ivy League faculty person. The adult child of the host and his father visiting from
Serbia spent the entire party alternating languages since the father spoke little English. The result was
unsettling.

Political correctness requires that the rudeness of Atticus's memo be addressed. Economic survival might require that hospitality trump bilingual expressiveness.

PK
M.Div.'80

#2 By Hieronymus 9:05a.m. on January 22, 2010

Atticus? ATTICUS?!

Wow...

Oh, and speaking of English: past tense of "forbid" is "forbade" ('az a shoutout to y'all prescriptionists out dere, yo!).

#3 By Anonymous 10:01a.m. on January 22, 2010

Isn't it good for employees to learn english? Frankly i find it insulting when i find employees chattering away in a language that I dont understand me, ignoring me. For all i know they could be laughing at me. So the eng policy in the earshot of customers is a good one. these people need to stop crying wolf -and I was born outside of the US and am a non native speaker of english

#4 By dk 11:15a.m. on January 22, 2010

I also think that hospitality should be the primary issue. There's an argument for speaking other languages for clarity of work-related communication, but it should be done with an awareness of how it compromises hospitality. Atticus is a public cafe. Its employees should conduct themselves with that in mind. They are already unfriendly at times as it is, snapping at customers in English, then turning to each other and laughing in Spanish.

#5 By anonymous 11:41a.m. on January 22, 2010

English is the primary language of the United States, and store owners should have the right to ensure the customer service experience they want for their business. So what's the big deal?

#6 By Yale 08 1:54p.m. on January 22, 2010

Does Atticus exist for the employees or for the customers?

Your answer to that question tells me everything I will need to know about your political/economic beliefs.

#7 By '12 2:02p.m. on January 22, 2010

I find it interesting that the report paints the policy as "utterly ridiculous," yet all of the comments found here support the policy.

I don't think it's too much to ask service employees in the United States to speak English at the workplace. Also, the reporters should attempt at least a slight measure of objectivity.

#8 By Goldie '08 2:18p.m. on January 22, 2010

wow I agree with PK for once

#9 By Pierson '10 2:24p.m. on January 22, 2010

Once again, I'm pleasantly surprised at how sane the YDN comments are on an article where the writers made something seem like a travesty. (See also: Sissies t-shirt) I'll definitely be stopping by Atticus more often now.

#10 By alum78 2:48p.m. on January 22, 2010

So Rodriguez finds the policy divisive? How does he feel about the large number of illegal immigrants in Fair Haven who openly disregard the law. Think that isn't divisive? How does he feel about the large number of unregistered and uninsured motor vehicles in his ward. The legal taxpayers in the city have to register thier vehicles and pay taxes. The workers at Atticus came here for economic stability and a better life. The least they could do is use the language of thier adopted country and that of a majority of the customers. Maybe they'd like it better if the menus were changed to spanish and we could guess as to what we were ordering. This pc stuff in New Haven really has to stop. It get to a point where it's beyond absurd.


#11 By yale11 3:19p.m. on January 22, 2010

Honestly, I don't know if this is racist or taking it too far, but Atticus is a PRIVATE business, and have the right to impose these kinds of rules. If the employees don't like it, they have every right to quit their jobs — I'm sure there are many others out there who would gratefully replace them.



#23 By Holden Caulfield's Death of Etiquette 12:27a.m. on January 23, 2010

These posts are a diagram of what has happened over the last 50 years in the guise of political correctness: the death of etiquette.

We are a rude world today, but man (or woman) are we "liberated" (from politeness, among other things). In an attempt to eliminate the "phoniness" Holden Caulfield abhorred, we have become authentically abrasive.
PK



#42 By Immigration mess 6:13p.m. on January 23, 2010

Wouldn't a solution to the immigration mess be to create a new category in the route to citizenship: longterm visitor.

Such a person would have to pay his/her own social security and health insurance. If granted citizenship, his/her payments would be credited retroactively toward maturity (26 working quarters is required to be vested in Social Security I believe.)

To hound people out of this country in police "raids" seems inhumane, if not gestapo-like, especially if they have children who were born here.

Can't the brains at Yale Law School offer a solution to this mess, a mess which provides so much fodder to the right-wing element?

PK


#43 By Jetsfan 6:37p.m. on January 23, 2010


Immigration enforcement is "gestapo" like ? Didn't you know FDR and Eisenhower deported every single illegal alien in the 1940's and 50's ? Look up operation "Wetback".
#44 By Yale '08 7:20p.m. on January 23, 2010
JetsFan-

Once again a misplaced analogy. How does operation Wetback in anyway legitimate state anti-immigration practices today? And how does it all relate to the more symbolic and basic issue at hand: the remaining xenophobia in a multicultural America?

Is it 1940's America?

#45 By If the French can do it... 3:16a.m. on January 24, 2010

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_dIBpQuXLI


#46 By Dollarphobia 9:16a.m. on January 24, 2010

#44:
I'm not sure it's xenophobia as much a dollarphobia. People are afraid of the dollars which seemingly "go out the window" to those who haven't "earned" them. Hence my call for a "permananet visitor" status which requires visitor workers to make payments to Social Security, to be held in escrow and invested by the government until citizenship is granted (if ever).

PK

#51 By @ Dollarphobia 3:16p.m. on January 24, 2010

Right on. I think you hit the nail on the head with that one. But honestly, dollarphobia is somewhat justified. With the employment crisis facing Americans today (especially young ones) it seems unfair in the extreme for precious jobs to go to illegal immigrants who do not pay the taxes the rest of us do, and it adds insult to injury if they do not interact with customers in English (which should be a a basic requirement of almost ALL jobs in America).

Atticus controversy continues
By Colin Ross and Zoe Gorman
Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter
Published Monday, January 25, 2010


More than a dozen protesters picketed outside Atticus Bookstore and Café on Chapel Street on Saturday, demanding a boycott of the eatery unless its management reverses its policy requiring employees to speak only English within customers’ earshot.
In response, Atticus manager Jean Marcel Recapet came outside and read a statement, saying Atticus is proud of the diversity of its employees and customers. He did not comment on the future of the controversial policy.
Speaking after Recapet, Eloy Lira, a Hispanic employee who has worked at Atticus for 13 years, said Atticus is “like my...

#1 By The Right to Be Rude 4:56a.m. on January 25, 2010
Censorship causes Blindness? Well, Rudeness causes Bankruptcy.
PK
M.Div.'80


#2 By ? 10:21a.m. on January 25, 2010

Tempest in a teashop?

#3 By Anonymous 10:30a.m. on January 25, 2010

Liberalism will be the ruin of everyone. Dont people understand? If they dont learn English, the employees will forever be relegated to low paying jobs? The best way to learn a second language is to be forcefully immersed in it. These liberals need to stop worrying about everyone else's rights and minorities need to stop squealing discrimination at every point. No, I am not White, I am a minority, non-native English speaking, offended by such rude employees. As #1 above said, I take my business elsewhere.

#4 By What country are we in? 1:58p.m. on January 25, 2010


When in Rome do as the Romans....when in the United States speak ENGLISH please!!!
Oh, and I am Cuban!!!! Minorities for English only!!!!

#6 By To #3 3:58p.m. on January 25, 2010

The employees at Atticus can all speak English very well. They just choose to occasionally communicate with coworkers in Spanish.

Since when is it rude to speak a different language? Is it a right of the customer to eavesdrop on employee conversations?

#7 By Here we speak English 4:54p.m. on January 25, 2010

In my experience Spanish-speaking employees often discuss customers in front of their faces. I've done it myself before. I agree with #3.

#8 By Etiquette, the Dinosaur in the livingroom. 4:57p.m. on January 25, 2010

#6:
The highest purpose of etiquette is to make others feel comfortable---i.e. to NOT make them feel uncomfortable, at all cost.

In a public place those who provide service are required to be mannerly.
It's part of the job description.
Period.

Perhaps the most famous example of etiquette is Mrs. Herbert Hoover (apocryphal?) at a White House State Dinner where the guest of honor accidentally dropped a $10,000 crystal drinking goblet shattering it. To make the guest feel more comfortable about his expensive accident Mrs. Hoover dropped and broke her own $10,000 goblet.

PK


Tuesday, January 19, 2010

* O Full of Scorpions is my mind, dear wife.( III, ii, 41+) Macbeth




















Levin regrets T-shirt flap

The Yale Daily News
By Jordi Gasso and Nora Caplan-Bricker
Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter
Published Tuesday, January 19, 2010
In response to the complaint of a free-speech advocacy group, University President Richard Levin said he regrets the controversy surrounding the Freshman Class Council’s axed T-shirt design for the Harvard-Yale Game.
In a Dec. 18 letter to Levin, Adam Kissel of the Foundation for Individuals Rights in Education said Yale College Dean Mary Miller acted inappropriately by ruling “unacceptable” an FCC T-shirt design that offended some members of the gay community. In Jan. 14 a letter to Kissel, provided to the News by FIRE, Levin said the members of FCC reached a decision to change the...

#1 By 00 5:06a.m. on January 19, 2010

great response from levin. fits the culture of the yale i remember and lays some concerns to rest>

#2 By Easily Intimidated? 5:23a.m. on January 19, 2010

What is the lesson? Modern students are too deferential to power? Too easily given to following orders? T'aint the Yale of William Sloane Coffin's day. BTW, nice job of separating the Levins.

PK
M.Div.'80


#3 By Old Blue 10:53a.m. on January 19, 2010

Pllleassse!
Her Deanness finds a tee shirt "unacceptable!"
Me thinks she doth protest too much, and should apologize to the FCC for rendering her opinions in such a heavy handed way. Too bad Levin has to waste his time apologizing for her.

#4 By First Amendment 12:15p.m. on January 19, 2010

C'mon Old Blue:
Levin "waste his time" apologizing? Free speech is the aorta of the University.
PK
M.Div'80


#5 By Kim 12:53p.m. on January 19, 2010

Levin failed to exercise similar restraint when he compared pro-life proponents to terrorists last year. Where was the apology in relation to that?

#6 By Old Blue '73 4:54p.m. on January 19, 2010

It would be nice to see the text of Dean Ou's email to the FCC to judge whether it really is as open to interpretation as Levin says it is. But I agree with #2 above, the bulk of very bright ugrads these days are rules-followers to a fault, by and large.


# 7 By O Full of Scorpions is my Mind
9:25 p.m. January 19, 2010

#6:

And the reason today's ugrads are "rules followers" by and large? The Draft-free world they grew up in. Unfairness is just a "fringe issue" these days. Nothing worth upsetting the apple cart about. The biggest unfairness they've experienced is the Supreme Court cheating Gore out of the presidency:

Nothing that really hits home---like being carted off to Viet Nam and turned into a modern day Macbeth: "Oh full of scorpions is my mind . . .". (Shakespeare's description of PTSD 400 years before the illness was diagnosed.)

#8 By Blood will have blood 9:30 p.m. January 19, 2010

PS to # 6: Shakespeare's other premonitory definition of PTSD (by 400 years) in Macbeth reads thus:
"Blood will have blood."
PK
M.Div. '80


#9 By Egalitarian 10:53p.m. on January 19, 2010


One thing that seems to be missing from this discussion is that these shirts are insulting to a much broader group than just the LGBT community. It is insulting to women because it implies that feminine behavior is undesirable or inferior. It is insulting to men who do not conform to or agree with the alpha male stereotype, for obvious reasons. It has no place in a community that claims to be diverse and tolerant.

As far as the appropriateness of the University's actions, it depends on whether the University is paying for shirts. If so, then it certainly has the right to refuse to pay for them if they carry a hateful message. Otherwise, it would be appropriate for the administration to criticize the message but not to censor it. (It's calling responding to speech you don't like with more speech.)

I agree with #5 that it was improper for Levin to compare the pro-life with terrorism, although it was still certainly protected free speech.




#11 By Borrowed Robes 1;05 a.m. January 20, 2010

I disagree with # 9. "Sissy" does not imply "female", it implies non-agressive. A male is supposed to be agressive i.e. use his muscles to subdue others (the biological determinism model) and a female is supposed to be nurturing, using the soft tissue appeal of the mammary ensemble not to subdue but to enrich and expand others, specifically offspring (also the biological determinism model.)
What is offensive is NOT the donning or doffing of the biological robes, but the SWAPPING of biological robes: Why do you dress me in soft tissue when nature intends me to wear tissue tough and hard?
What is happening as we become more cerebral and less biological (more emancipated from gender identity and less imprisoned by it) is an increasing anxiety about renouncing our biology: Why do you dress me in borrowed robes---or tee-shirts?
PK



#17 By Egalitarian 11:45a.m. on January 20, 2010
To #11: Really? So, it's appropriate to go around imposing one's way on other people by physical force as long it's a male who's doing it? What a wonderful way to needlessly perpetuate violence!

To #13: The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word "sissy" as "An effeminate person; a coward," thereby associating the undesirable trait of cowardice with femininity. It's simply wrong to say that this is a reflection of my prejudices and not those of society.



#18 By Semantic Battlefields 12:50p.m. on January 20, 2010

# 17
I didn't say it was approrpriate. I said it is the sad history of biological determinism: The fate of those with muscles has been to overwhelm others with power. The fate of those with milk-makers and a baby-maker has been to produce children and feed others.

It is only in the recent "liberation epoch" that we have been able to disentangle identity from gender. However, the resulting anxiety manifests
itself on the semantic battlefields of "sissy" and "butch" and "marriage" etc.

PK

Friday, January 15, 2010

* Genuflecting to Vatican West: Princeton


























Grad students react to new GRE


By Baobao Zhang
Staff Reporter
Published Friday, January 15, 2010


Unless they crack the books a little earlier than planned, Yalies hoping to go to graduate school in the next few years may face a very different entrance exam.
The Educational Testing Services announced that beginning in the fall of 2011, the GRE, a standardized test required for admission to many arts and sciences graduate schools in the U.S., will feature a different grading scale, 30 to 45 minutes of added time and a new option allowing test-takers to move between questions within sections of the test. While a majority of the 10 Yale graduate students interviewed who have taken...







#1 By Genuflecting to Princeton, the new Vatican 5:15a.m. on January 15, 2010


Princeton speaks ex cathedra and the world genuflects?

Who made Princeton (ETS)the Vicar of God?

The idolatrous worship of standardized tests is a dehumanizing influence in our society, blindly accepted by the masses.

"...changes in standardized tests like the GRE generally lead to lower scores for a few years"

Does anyone see the blatant unfairness here?

So for a few years people's futures and careers wills be decided by
whether or not they know the "ropes" of the new tests (how to "take", "maximize" or outwit them).

PK
M.Div.'80





#2 By Yale 08 9:52a.m. on January 15, 2010

Has the GRE spokesman cited in this article ever seen the current GRE test? First of all, if you "memorize formulas," that in and of itself isn't going to get you too far on a test that requires students to apply mathematical concepts, frequently in less-often-seen ways. Second, last I checked there are (800 - 200) / 10 + 1 = 61 possible scores a test taker may receive under the current GRE scoring method; by contrast, under the proposed alternative, there would only be 170 - 130 + 1 = 41 possible scores. Seriously, which of these two schemes is more likely to produce the most well-specified assessment of competency? Hopefully ETS will brief its spokespeople better next time to explain to them that the number of points between score levels has nothing to do with how precise a test score is; what matters is the size of those increments relative to the range of possible scores.


#3 By anonymous 10:43a.m. on January 15, 2010

I think the decline in grades might actually mean those who use test prep companies won't do as well because they can't prepare as well for a test that isn't as well know so, in a sense, it might lower the playing field.

They will almost definitely not change the distribution substantially.


#4 By grad 1:10p.m. on January 15, 2010

I disagree with #2's comment about applying mathematical concepts "in less-often-seen ways". Maybe that is true in the subject test, but the general test has nothing sophisticated at all.

Compare that with the Chinese students who can't speak English but get high verbal scores. The also pass Yale's SPEAK test before they are allowed to teach.

The GRE general test is nearly all common sense and basic literacy. Any Yale undergraduate should easily hit the 95th percentile or higher in every category in freshman year.


#5 By another grad 1:51p.m. on January 15, 2010

When I took the adaptive computer-based GRE general exam a few years ago it was just a speed test. The questions were easy but you could see how the answers were constructed to trap careless thinkers. A high score means only that you can do simple things quickly and reliably. That's how it always is with standardized tests. They don't test anything except how well you do on them.






#6 By * All Made of Ticky-tacky... 7:36p.m. on January 15, 2010

Except for the comment "They don't test anything except how well you do on them", these posts about the new GRE's are frightening for their bloodless, statistical analyses.

They betray an apathetic acceptance of standardized tests by standardized students on their way to becoming standardized citizens.

It seems like a nightmare of cookie-cutter education come true ---the death of the liberal arts and the triumph of Betty Crocker curricula:

Just add ingredients, mix, stir to rubric specifications and bake in a charter school for four years at a benchmark of 350 degrees and you get a perfectly shaped human being capable of taking standardized tests forever--even at Yale.

Pardon me while I vomit.

PK
M.Div.'80





























#7 By Y'09 10:55a.m. on January 16, 2010

PK, I think you're being unfair. (Oh, sorry, I'll wait while you finish purging yourself. Done? Great, I'll continue.)

If a student wants to go to graduate school, and graduate school requires the GRE, the student must care about doing well on the GRE, at least to some extent. Would you argue that the very desire to go to graduate school of any kind is characteristic of people on their way to becoming "standardized citizens"? That seems extreme and, frankly, silly.

Also, your tirade against the "cookie-cutter education" engendered by standardized tests is illogical in this context. Perhaps it's a problem in middle and high schools, but the idea that Yale professors would "teach to the GRE" is absolutely laughable, not to mention impossible. It's true that the material on the GRE has very little to do with anything we learn at a school like Yale - that's why students must study separately for these exams. The exams do not reflect the breadth of focus, depth of analysis, and emphasis on critical reasoning of a liberal arts education.

For the record, I took the GRE this fall, and I agree that standardized tests measure little besides ability to take standardized tests. However, as long as graduate programs still require them, students - especially those at elite colleges - will strive to do well on them. If you want to criticize the test-taking culture in this country, start from the top down. If you want to criticize the ethos of Yale undergraduates, at least pick a relevant topic and construct a decent argument.

#8 By * Standardized Murder of the Soul 4:19p.m. on January 16, 2010

Y'09:

Hyperbolic? Yes. Unfair? No. Yale isn't "teaching to the GRE's", but it is being populated by a generation of students who accept standardized testing as a way of academic life.

Russian education used to be criticized for separating children into camps of potential talent and non-talent at an early age--Super-tracking if you will.

Standardized testing does the same thing.

It was fascinating to hear Tim Burton , movie director (Edward Scissorhands, etc) whose watercolors are now a one-man show at the Museum of Modern Art, lament on a recent Charlie Rose interview, that while ALL children know how to draw, schools may kill that talent for many students by a certain age (puberty?).

That is the LEAST damage which education does to the human spirit, with its incessant evaluations, assessments, labels, grading and reward/punishments.

I shudder to think of the automatons who successfully rise through the ranks of such systems to become the elites at places like Yale.

What else besides "drawing" have they had crushed out of their sprits by the time they have tread the competetive mill to arrive in New Haven?

When you have children you will know of what I speak, as you watch the joy, spontaneity and spirit squeezed out of them like toothpaste out of a tube year after competetive school year.

John Dewey, Paul Goodman, Howard Gardner, Bart Giamatti, where art thou?

PS: I have written in my blog about the deadening impact of education on the human soul and the modern world's "athleticization of life" (Arne Duncan's "Race to the Top") as Yale President Giamatti warned.

However either you or another poster persuaded me a week or so ago on my Bloom post, that it is crass and vulgar to advertise my blog in these posts so I am omitting its name and url.

If you are interested I'm sure you can find it somehow.

In the meantime, go study for success instead of for joy. It will make the next 50 years easier for you.

#9 By @#4 1:25a.m. on January 18, 2010

The GRE verbal is by far the hardest part of the test. Scoring in the 95th percentile of verbal is very difficult. When you get in the 700 range, the CAT mechanism of the GRE begins throwing you complex reading comprehension questions, sometimes 7-8 in a row. The strategy is simply to turn your brain to goo. The diff. btwn a correct and incorrect answer is often so ludicrously small that it becomes almost subjective. The vocab is extremely high and of course, mostly useless.
The whole test is a miserable joke that does a poor job of assessing actual ability at the graduate level.

#10 By Yale '08 1:30a.m. on January 18, 2010

The GREs are awful, pathetic tests. It's absurd and humiliating that graduate students still need to take these antiquated and moronic tests. OK, I understand the need to cull an applicant pool filled with tens of thousands of undergrads who have little to show in their lives except potential (thus far). But to assess graduate students in the same way is ridiculous. What PhD writes a research paper in 30-45 minutes based on an extremely selective (and often asinine) question?! What PhD uses the selective and obscure vocab. selected for the GRE instead of the technical jargon of their chosen field?
Is this country still that obsessed with robotic and brainless thinking to have to subject its talented graduate applicants to this nightmare testing process?

#11 By YDS Standing Against the GRE's 2:29p.m. on January 18, 2010

Just for the record: some academic entities do rebel.
After I graduated from YDS (1980) there was a debate among faculty about whether or not to require the GRE for admisssion.
To their everlasting credit and honor, the Divinity faculty agreed that ONE major divinity school had to STAND AGAINST the trend of evaluating human beings on the basis of test scores, and they decided NOT to require the GRE for admission.
That principled stand may since have been reversed with the increasing trend toward valoriziing conservative theology
evident in recent years at YDS.
But there was a shining moment in its history, when the country's oldest and most distinguished divinity school rejected the notion of requiring the GRE's as screening process in evaluating human beings.
PK
M.Div'80





Thursday, January 14, 2010

* Yale Daily News Removes Abusive Speech






















Letter to the Editor
Yale Daily News

Dear Editor:

For a year or so now as an alumnus (M. Div. ’80) I have been bantering with posters on your board in reaction to a variety of articles published in YDN.

Most of the time my comments have either been ignored or trivialized, which is fine with me. Validation is not my goal,

Today however, one of your posters (#2 in response to “Spate of Murders Alarms City”) crossed the line with me with his/her comment “Hurry up and croak you washed up mistake.”

Wishing for the death of another person is abusive. It is also disturbing. Your "comment moderation policy" excludes abusive speech.

I believe you owe me an apology.

Paul D. Keane
M.Div.’80

NOTE:


Editor Paul Needham e-mailed me an apology and removed #2's post from the comment board.

I have mixed feelings about the removal.

I think it should have stayed there in its bald indignity with my reply below. (Note #3 became # 2 after the removal of the original abusive #2)

Spate of murders alarms city
Community fears recent shootings may be related; police mount major raid

Share By Colin Ross
Staff Reporter
Published Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Early Tuesday morning, 45 New Haven police officers and detectives raided dozens of locations across the predominantly black Dixwell and Newhallville neighborhoods. The operation was carefully planned: In the preceding days, New Haven police detectives met with agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation to identify as many targets as possible.
The officers were determined to find the criminals who have murdered at least seven city residents since October — many of them execution-style, with a gunshot to the front or back of the head. The most recent murder occurred Jan. 3, when a...

#1 By Town/Ghetto 5:46a.m. on January 13, 2010

I lived on the border between the ghetto and Yale (Elm and Howe Streets) when I attended Yale and have written several times in my blog at the anger Yale generates in the New Haven community.

So, let me get this straight, now:

We have an institution with a 17 BILLION (not million) dollar endowment, whose main plant is shaped like medieval palaces facing INWARD away from the community, and three blocks away in the Dixwell Avenue area we have a racial ghetto.

Now, naivete of naivete, someone is surprised that the offensive architectural dichotomy (Yale's palaces are like an upraised middle finger of an elite shoved in the face of the dispossessed) generates envy and crime?!

And now, further shock, when the truth of Macbeth is verfied:Blood will have blood they say.

Criminals released from prison (which is a a notoriously racist punishment mill) return to exact retribution on their informers.

"I am in blood stepp'd in so far that to return were as tedious as to go o'er."

Yale will someday have students who are afraid to walk New Haven streets.

I was myself mugged in the parking lot of St. Thomas Moore Church at night when I attended Yale 1976-80. My wallet was taken. It had one dollar in it.

Paul Keane
M.Div.'80


#2 By anonymous 3:19p.m. on January 13, 2010


I think the first poster totally missed the point of the article. Well, maybe not totally. Yes, there is some resentment in New Haven for Yale BUT Black men are killing THEMSELVES...they're not running into the campus and shooting students. This highlights a very sad trend in the Black community of violence against one's own--and yes, it puts Yalies in danger but AGAIN they are not the targets of these crimes. I hope I've been clear...


#3 By Disturbing 4:12p.m. on January 13, 2010

ghet·to (gět'ō)
n. pl. ghet·tos or ghet·toes

A usually poor section of a city inhabited primarily by people of the same race, religion, or social background, often because of discrimination.

# 2 My grandmother lived in New Haven's ghetto on one side of the Green at Elm and State Streets for 20 years from 1940-65 in a third floor walk-up with no hot water.

I lived in New Haven's ghetto on the other side of the Green on Howe Street for 8 years from 1977-85 in an apartment building which had as part of its HUD charter that 80% of the residents must be classified as "poor".

The previous definition fits for both of us despite current politically correct censorship.

UU has nothing to do with me.

The intense anger in #2's post and the wish that a human being might die are disturbing.

PK

Monday, January 11, 2010

* A Prophet is not withour Honor except in his own Country
















Bloom cancels class due to illness

By Lauren Rosenthal
Staff Reporter
Published Monday, January 11, 2010
The Yale Daily News

Due to illness, professor Harold Bloom GRD ’56 will not teach the two classes he was scheduled to offer this coming semester.
English professor Leslie Brisman described Bloom as “gravely ill” in a Jan. 7 e-mail to students in Bloom’s fall seminar, “Shakespeare and the Canon: Histories, Comedies and Poems.” Bloom has been in the hospital since December.
According to Yale’s Online Course Information Web site, Bloom’s spring seminars “Shakespeare and the Canon: Tragedies and Romances” and “Four Twentieth-Century Poets: W. B. Yeats, Wallace Stevens, D. H. Lawrence, Hart Crane” have...





















#1 By Honor 5:11a.m. on January 11, 2010

Perhaps it is inappropriate at this moment. Perhaps it is too late.

But isn't there a University award or Presidential (Woodbridge Hall) award which could be given to this great man of ideas and writing (Anxiety of Influence; Shakespeare)even at his bedside?

A prophet is not without honor EXCEPT in his own country.

This can be reversed or at least mitigated even now.

PK
M.Div,'80

#2 By Recent Alum 2:11p.m. on January 11, 2010

Wait, Paul Keane says something sensible that I agree with?????????? This is a first, coming from someone who reads the YDN board almost every day.

#3 By Strings 5:47p.m. on January 11, 2010

Recent Alum:

If you're near campus (which I'm not)
do your best to pull some strings. Carpe diem. Time is of the essence here.
PK
M.Div.'80





#23 By Ha! 9:10a.m. on January 11, 2010


"PK"

Bloom does not look kindly AT ALL on DIV... Just so you know.


#25 By Neither do I ! 8:49p.m. on January 14, 2010

# 23:
Haven't you caught on yet? Neither do I!
Note: Bloom lists The Book of Mormon as one of the 300 great books he includes in his Western Canon. This baffles me.

On the other hand, Bloom's impact on Western intellectual thought has been so enormous, that I repeat my appeal from another post again here:

Perhaps it is inappropriate at this moment. Perhaps it is too late.

But isn't there a University award or Presidential (Woodbridge Hall) award which could be given to this great man of ideas and writing (Anxiety of Influence; Shakespeare)even at his bedside?

A prophet is not without honor EXCEPT in his own country.

This can be reversed or at least mitigated even now.

PK
M.Div,'80






* Girly-Man




















A A A Rights group criticizes Yale

By Jordi Gasso
Staff Reporter
Published Monday, January 11, 2010
THE YALE DAILY NEWS

This year’s Game may be over, but the controversy over the Freshman Class Council’s proposed T-shirt design continues.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, an organization that focuses on civil liberties in American colleges and universities, sent a letter last month to University President Richard Levin criticizing the administration for asking the FCC to reconsider its decision to sell a T-shirt deemed offensive for its use of the word “sissy” by members of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Co-operative. When members of the co-op raised their concerns in the...




#1 By Homocism? 5:26a.m. on January 11, 2010

I have written about the "sissy factor" in Obama's decision to increase troops in Adghanistan. Will my blog be labelled
homo-cist (is this a word)for doing so?

Such homophobic bullying is a reality in the male world where Schwartzenegger's mouth, twittering above a grotesque body of biceps,and under a forehead of dyed hair, can utter the word "girly-man" and expect his opponent to be cowed.

Let's get this male fear of being feminized out on the table ---or out on the t-shirt --- and laugh it out of existence, not subdue it in censorship to rear its ugly head elsewhere another day.

Paul Keane
M.Div'80

Sunday, January 10, 2010

* Proust's Grotesque Taxidermy


















Roy Rogers and Dale Evans (the "singing cowboy/girl") in front of Roy's horse , Trigger, which he had stuffed by a taxidermist.


History is a groteque taxidermy: All skin and no flesh and blood, just sawdust. A recent exchange with a poster on a Yale Daily News column brings this to mind:














Tuesday, January 5, 2010 10:35 a.m.
Iran names Yale among blacklisted organizations
BY
THE YALE DAILY NEWS


















Iran's Ministry of Intelligence named Yale one of 60 "subversive" international organizations accused of creating unrest in Iran after the country's June elections,
the Los Angeles Times reported on its Web site Monday.
Citing two Iranian news agencies, the L.A. Times said an unnamed Iranian deputy minister of intelligence for foreign affairs made the announcement at a news conference Monday. The minister reportedly said Iranians should have no contact with the 60 organizations, which were accused of being part of an anti-Iran plot backed by the United States, Great Britain and Israel.
"Having any relation, signing any contract with them or receiving any facilities from individuals or legal entities affiliated to those institutions and foundations are illegal and forbidden," the minister reportedly said, adding that it is illegal for Iranian political groups to receive "cash and non-cash assistance" from the named organizations.
According to a report from the Islamic Republic News Agency, linked to by the L.A. Times, other blacklisted organizations include the Hoover Institution, Stanford University's public policy research center; the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank; Human Rights Watch, a non-governmental organization that has recorded human rights abuses of Iranian dissidents; multiple American organizations that promote democracy abroad; and several international, Persian-language news outlets, including BBC Persian and Voice of America.

#12 By Helen Li 4:51a.m. on January 9, 2010
Yale: A world-class university with fifth-rate moral and ethical leadership.



#13 By YDN frightened or cautious? 10:10a.m. on January 9, 2010

Wait a minute.

Yale does SOME things right.

Didn't it divest itself of South African stocks when Bishop Moore was on the Corporation? Didn't it have the first African American Ph.D. (Physics, I think)?

Didn't it give birth (albeit traumatically) to Doonesbury?

Didn't it NOT FIRE William Sloane Coffin as Chaplain during the Civil Rights/Viet Nam era?

Give credit where credit is due.

BTW---I notice the latest Westerfeld article (about his attempted murder) has been removed from your web-edition. (At least, I am unable to locate it) Is that caution or did the debate over the definition of the term "Islamists" actually frighten you?

Paul Keane
M.Div. '80


#15 By YC07 8:00p.m. on January 9, 2010


#13,

Could you explain why the firing of William Sloane Coffin is a correct move? Are you implying that his involvement in the anti-war & civil rights movements is morally indefensible?
























#17 By (Signed version) Proust's grotesque taxidermy 10:23p.m. on January 9, 2010

# 13:

(I say this respectfully, perhaps with envy):
Maybe you're too young to remember Yale circa 1960-75.

It was a super-REPUBLICAN conservative bastion of moneyed-alumni who abhorred Coffin's activism, Henry Luce and William F. Buckley to name only two among many.


























In fact, back then, activism was equated with communism in Republican minds. When the Kent State students were shot in 1970 many people said they should have shot MORE of the students: And they didn't mean just in Ohio.





















It is impossible to recreate with words the polarizing hatred and fear which existed in the country during those days between activists (long-haired hippies) and what Nixon would later succesfully name and exploit as The Silent Majority.(This was brilliantly satirized by Archie Bunker and Meathead in All in the Family, early '70s)




















A former YDN editor, Henry Luce and his magazine empire (Time/Life) didn't help much to diminish this polarization. Quite the contrary.

The older I get the more I see how history is a kind of grotesque taxidermy.
In recherche du temps perdu becomes the futility of futilities.

Paul Keane
M.Div' 80