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Letters
April
2001
Pro-Guns
I was intrigued
by the article on John Lott ("Details,"
Feb.). For the life of me, I cannot understand the academic "anger"
at his work and at his very presence at Yale.
The article mentions
the "conservative bias" that some charge he brings to his writings. I'm sorry,
but what about the leftist bias that "riles" some of the Yale faculty when Lott
is referred to as a "Yale professor"?
I'm pro-choice and
pro-guns. When I first heard that Yale had hired Lott, I was very proud of the
courage that took. But I'm also aware of the implied abhorrence of guns on the
part of other faculty members. And I'm aware of the intense political struggles
that occur behind closed doors in any academic institution.
I'm neither an extreme
right-winger nor an extreme left-winger. I was happy when economist Thomas Sowell
left Yale to find his true home at the Hoover Institute at Stanford. But I believe
that Lott is an extraordinary individual who belongs at Yale. He would be a
terrific permanent addition to its distinguished faculty. It would be an honor
to refer to him as "professor."
Bob Witkowski '70
rjpix@primenet.com
Prescott, AZ

Alcohol
Issues
All generalizations
are false, especially those concerning the student body of Yale.
The foremost strength of Yale's student body is that its breadth
makes it so difficult to characterize. Therefore, Kara Loewentheil's
article, "Why Do Yalies Drink So Much?" (Feb.),
is simply asking for trouble.
Even by its formal
definition of five drinks in a night, "binge drinking" is far from the only
drinking at Yale, and even further from being the only social scene. Those students
who routinely throw up or pass out due to alcohol are a very small minority,
at least in the circles I've seen. Or maybe I just need some cooler friends.
David
Slifka '01
New Haven, CT
I was sorry to read
in Kara Loewentheil's article
that Yale students "cannot seem to accept the idea of just relaxing
and consciously spending some time not thinking. It's just not the
Yale way. We don't do yoga."
Apparently Yale's
academic and social culture overemphasizes a form of Western rational and striving
consciousness from which students seek relief in alcohol. I would hope that
this great university could guide students to explore other modes of consciousness
taught by various spiritual and meditative traditions.
Ideally, a Yale education
could open students to ways of being that are broader than the limited choices
of hyper-rationalism and drunkenness.
Thomas
Greening '52
Los Angeles, CA
In reading Kara Loewentheil's
column, I was struck by one
line in particular. While bemoaning binge drinking and the abuse
of alcohol as dangerous and frightening ways to escape the enormous
pressures in the Yale community, Lowentheil also asserts, "We don't
do yoga."
I feel compelled
to write and say that, in fact, Yale students "do yoga" -- both regularly and
in large numbers. During my 16 years of membership at the Payne Whitney Gym,
yoga has never been as popular as it is now. Students craving escape from pressures,
academic or otherwise, can attend no fewer than 14 yoga classes with eight different
instructors every day of the week except Sunday.
Classes are always
quickly filled when course registration is offered. On typical evenings, more
than 80 students crowd into the sixth-floor exercise room to practice intense
routines of sun salutations, triangles, shoulder stands, and the very Yale-
sounding "proud warriors." I'm sure that all these students would attest to
the stress-relieving benefits of increased strength, flexibility, mental focus,
and tranquility.
Yoga, not alcohol,
is the best way I've found to take the mind out of high gear -- and apparently
many Yale students feel the same way.
Jeff
Fuller '67, '69MusM
jefffuller@snet.net
New Haven, CT

Which
'60s?
I was intrigued
by Carter Wiseman's article on the Yale days of George W. Bush '68
("In the Days of DKE and S.D.S.", Feb.).
What is remarkable to me is how recollection and history become
fused, and how the products of one man's memory can become tacitly
accepted as fact.
My recollections
of those times differ. During Bush's years at Yale, the University was in the
early stages of making the transition from a somewhat insular finishing school
of higher learning to a creative, urban University that questioned many of the
core premises of society. Yale deserves credit for its role in being the first
Ivy League college to actively engage the issues of civil rights and race, as
well as the first to have an organized movement challenging the Vietnam War
(Americans for the Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy).
Allard Loewenstein
and William Sloane Coffin Jr. were national figures during that time, and they
profoundly shaped the conscience of the school and the country. This was also
a time when student-faculty parties at the Art and Architecture building had
punch bowl brews laced with LSD. Many classmates experimented with drugs, only
to become lost to their friends and to themselves. The school was as unprepared
as the students at that time; there was little counseling, and even less understanding.
There clearly was
the other Yale -- Fence Club, the "mixers," the "animal house" parties and brawls
at DKE -- but I still remember Joe Lieberman's precocious editorials in the
Yale Daily News, and the richness and intensity of conversations with
friends.
It was the time before
civil rights and Vietnam had become movements, and before the media and an adolescent
culture had overwhelmed substantive discourse. In that sense, perhaps it was
a fated and sheltered time, but in my case it is what made my Yale education.
John
Henry Clippinger '66
john@ecocap.com
Jefferson, NJ

Managing
Yale's Money
Congratulations
to Yale's David Swensen on his achievement of a 40 percent return
on the endowment last year ("Giving and Getting," Feb.).
However, if Joe McNay
'56 can turn $380,000 into $70 million for the Class of 1954 in some 21 years
("Light & Verity," Dec.), I strongly recommend that Swensen give McNay a
substantial chunk of capital to manage for the benefit of the Yale endowment.
David
Wilkinson '53
Marietta, GA
Your article
about how the enterprising Class of 1954 has raised $70 million
for the University by starting a classwide investment club reminds
me how one of the Princeton undergraduate eating clubs raised money
for a clubhouse.
Back before the First
World War, one of the members, a pre-med, gave physical examinations to the
entire membership. The pre-med identified the three members who (in his pre-professional
opinion) were most likely to come to an early demise. The officers then took
out big life insurance policies on all three. Within five years, the first of
them was gone, and the club got its clubhouse, which stands to this day.
David
H. Finnie '51LLB
New Canaan, CT

Cap
on, Cap off
My hat goes off
(figuratively) to Professor Albers for holding the line regarding
baseball caps in the classroom ("Letters," Feb.).
I have been a college professor for 16 years, and I include this
statement in all my syllabi:
"On a personal note,
you will have my undying gratitude if you would refrain from wearing caps in
class. Taking off one's hat has historically been a sign of respect; I would
humbly ask you to show respect for our classroom as a place of learning and
seeking after truth. Sometimes people remind me that it is only a sign of respect
for a man to take off his hat; to the women who like to wear caps I will only
say 'let your conscience be your guide!'"
Dan
F. Ippolito '79
ippolito@anderson.edu
Anderson, IN

Those
Reunion Costs
The letter written
by Ray Harris '72 (Feb.)
was disturbing. He complains of the cost of reunions, and he punishes
the University by reducing his donations.
Then, I read the
fascinating article by his classmate, Ted Gray, who fell in love with "a beautiful,
older enchantress" who gave meaning to life ("News from Alumni House," Feb.).
The enchantress whom he loved, and who shaped his life, is none other than Yale.
That love, Ray Harris,
is the reason why one returns for reunions. Soon, I will be enjoying my 65th
reunion -- and whatever it costs, it will be a bargain.
Larry
A. Hart '36
Pebble Beach, CA
Regarding the high
cost of Yale reunions, I think I know one way to reduce expenses: Why not replace
open bars with cash bars? Open bars encourage excessive drinking and have to
represent a significant part of the overall cost of the reunion.
I would be willing
to pay for what I drink, and to chip in for bottles of wine at the dinners.
This may seem less aristocratic, but it is possible to have a good time without
the phony largess of open bars.
Edward
Rossmann '55
Aurora, NY

Administration
Agenda
What the hey is
going on with the Yale administration? Within a relatively few weeks,
I read that Yale's undergraduate admissions office 1) reports a
record low acceptance rate, 2) hires a Web site designer and a "recruiter"
to stimulate more applications, 3) announces that they will accept
the Common Application in order to attract applicants from outside
the traditional sources ("Light & Verity," Feb.),
4) lets Princeton seize the initiative (but will undoubtedly follow)
in eliminating student loans from financial aid packages, and 5)
announces a reduction in future class sizes because of inadequate
campus housing.
Meanwhile, in recent
years, several Ivy League colleges have increased their class numbers. What
is the point of making it progressively more difficult to attend Yale? The number
of high-quality applicants Yale is turning down now is bordering on unconscionable.
D.
S. McCabe '53
Caldwell, NJ

Corrections
In our February
feature, "In the Days of DKE and
S.D.S.," we mistakenly identified Dean Rusk as the U.S. secretary
of defense in 1967. He was secretary of state.
In our February "Vintage
YAM," WYBC's frequency was listed as 94.0 FM.
The frequency is 94.3 FM.
In our
April 2000 "Light & Verity" article about Professor Serge Lang's
public protest of the offer of a tenured professorship of history
to Daniel Kevles, we referred to Lang's book Challenges as
"self-published." It was in fact published by the trade publisher
Springer-Verlag. We also mistakenly identified the Journal of
Information Ethics as the Journal of Ethical Behavior.
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