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The
Yale Alumni Magazine welcomes readers' letters, which should
be sent to: Letters Editor, Yale Alumni Magazine, P.O. Box 1905,
New Haven, CT 06509-1905; via fax to (203) 432-0651; or via e-mail
to: YAM@yale.edu.
Due
to the volume of correspondence, we are unable
to respond to or publish all mail received. Letters accepted for
publication are subject to editing. Unless correspondents request
otherwise, e-mail addresses will be published for letters received
electronically.
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Letters
May
2001
Tercentennial
Fallout
"Quarrels
with Providence" (Mar.), Lewis Lapham's meditation on the meaning
of Yale, struck me as the rarest sort of literary journalism. He
has traced an elusive sensibility across the centuries. A familiar
place has been redefined for the future. The scene with George W.
Pierson comes alive in a way that usually only a novel can manage.
The meaning, as Lapham says, is "in the stone."
David
Freeman '68MFA
sanandreas@aol.com
Los Angeles, CA
Lewis
Lapham's article is both a commendable and heroic effort to
describe the struggle for the soul of Yale over three centuries.
However, I have two quibbles with his notion of Providence. While
Lapham is correct to identify the unchanging history of "remonstrance
and dissent" that characterizes Yale, he is remiss in noting the
absence of a moral center that puts such dissent in context, as
well as the apparent absence of any discussion of such a need in
contemporary Yale.
We probably
all can agree that Nathan Hale was morally correct in his patriotic
belief and sacrifice, while John C. Calhoun was not in his attempts
to cobble together compromises to save the morally bankrupt idea
of slavery. But the list of "Who's Been Blue," which precedes Lapham's
piece, indicates the contemporary dimensions of moral discussion.
Henry L. Stimson, Class of 1888, is noted. According to David McCullough
'55, Stimson played an instrumental role in dropping the atomic
bomb on Hiroshima, including selecting that city as a target. Other
notable alumni, such as John Hersey '36 and former Yale professor
Robert Jay Lifton, have written about the horrors of this seminal
event of the past century, while McGeorge Bundy '40 defended this
act. More recently, Tom Wolfe '57PhD, in A Man in Full, has
described the moral crisis of a man who could be described as the
Dink Stover of Atlanta.
The point
is that Yale has played an important role in major events and their
impact -- a role that demands a moral examination in academe today.
One does not have to debate the issue of God or the various "-isms"
that plague campuses today to discuss morality from the viewpoint
of multiple academic disciplines. To me, that is the fundamental
issue confronting an increasingly corporate- dominated society which,
as Lapham notes, does affect Yale directly.
Paul
Wortman '62
pwortman@notes.cc.sunysb.edu
East Setauket, NY
I greatly
enjoyed reading your collected accounts of Yale's most
significant graduates through the decades. They provide an inspiring
benchmark, and I see that I still have some work left to do if I
am to appear alongside them in the 400th anniversary issue.
Miguel
Cruz '98MA
Washington, DC
Bravo
on the Tercentennial issue of the
Yale Alumni Magazine .
I've been reading the magazine for a frightening number of years,
and this was the best, most entertaining, most thought-provoking,
and surely the most ambitious effort I've seen.
Of course
you couldn't possibly receive that much praise from a Yale alum
without some criticism. I was rather stunned to encounter the section
of quotes from famous graduates,
which included embarrassing entries for Clarence Thomas, Bill Clinton,
and George W. Bush. I'm not sure if this was an attempt at humor
or high-minded candor, but it seemed bizarrely out of place given
the occasion and the other quotes on the page.
My compliments,
nonetheless, on what was overall a fine, fine job.
Arthur
Greenwald '75
Studio City, CA
You did
a masterful job with the Tercentennial edition. There is so much
good reading throughout, and plenty of evidence of a lot of good
planning! You have every right to feel mighty proud of the end result.
E.
Bartlett Barnes '29
Bristol, CT
It was
a joy to read "Eloquent Elis"
(Mar.) but a shock to see that not one woman was quoted. Haven't
any female graduates said anything worth repeating? Maya Lin? Wendy
Wasserstein? Hillary Clinton? Michiko Kakutani? Jodie Foster? Anita
Hill? Camille Paglia? Naomi Wolf? Jane Mendelsohn?
My book,
For Girls Only, included over 450 quotes to inspire middle
school girls. I worked to include quotes from people of color and
both male and female Yalies.
I wish
you all a happy 300th anniversary, but I'm afraid the grade I'd
have to give to your list of 28 quotes is . an "incomplete."
Carol
Weston '78
New York, NY

Presidential
Past
As
a graduate of the Class of 1966, I enjoyed Carter Wiseman's article
about George W. Bush seeking to remain "aloof to the fray" as an
undergraduate in the days of Vietnam War protests ("In
the Days of DKE and S.D.S.," Feb.). I wish only to add a few
thoughts.
First,
I got the impression that the author felt undergraduates in our
day who didn't side with the antiwar protesters were at Yale just
to party, drink, and have fun. That was definitely not the case.
Many of us were serious students, some too grateful to Yale for
making it financially possible to attend to risk screwing things
up with alcohol or late-night parties.
Secondly,
I think the impact of the larger fray, the Vietnam War itself, was
quite significant even several years before the Class of 1968 had
to face it. By at least 1965, those of us registered in Local Board
5, in Wilmington, Delaware, knew that the only secure graduate-school
deferments would be for people going on to medical or divinity schools.
The rest would have to enlist or would be drafted shortly after
graduation. Many members of my class served on active duty; many
were sent to Vietnam; and too many, including two members of the
small English seminar I took in 1965, were killed.
I left
the article wondering why there was so little mention of that larger
fray, which all of us had to face in one way or another when we
graduated, and specifically no mention of why and how Bush got into
the National Guard. I heard stories from new Guardsmen, who were
putting in their four months of training with me at Fort Dix before
going home to resume their lives. They told me about how hard it
was to get into the Guard at that time. I heard how families literally
moved to other states to position their sons for rumored vacancies
in the Guard. I also heard how the rich and well-connected found
spaces where supposedly none existed.
I don't
suggest that Bush entered the Guard to avoid Vietnam service, but
I do suggest that in the late 1960s, there was huge demand for scarce
positions in the National Guard. It was a time when people did not
get into the Guard by remaining "above the fray" and letting things
happen; it took very good luck or very hard work on someone's part.
I would thus like to have heard "the rest of the story" about the
future commander-in-chief's becoming a Guardsman.
Thanks
again for an interesting article.
Miles
D. Wichelns '66
Sacramento, CA
Carter
Wiseman obviously wrote his feature
article on George W. Bush before Bush assumed office. In his closing
paragraph, Wiseman sounds like all the pundits in the weeks before
January 20th. I admit I was saying similar things: Bush "remains
a man in the middle," and he'll be "walking a line in Washington
no wider than the margin that elected him."
What
a difference a day makes! From his Cabinet appointees, to his global
assault on women of childbearing age, to the environment, to his
military procurement and tax policies, Bush reveals himself to be
completely in hock to the far right. He is shamelessly ramming it
down our throats while the Democrats, the media, and the country
at large still seem to be willing to give a new president the benefit
of the doubt. He will inflict suffering on the poor, while rewarding
his wealthy friends.
I, for
one, will be working overtime to elect a true opposition Congress
in 2002 -- if voting still remains an option by then. Maybe we can
stop the madness before it blows up in our faces.
Eric
Gordon '66
Los Angeles, CA

Drinking
Dilemma
I wish
to refer the reader to the February "College
Comment," in which Kara Loewentheil '03 asks the question, "Why
Do Yalies Drink So Much?"
Most
Yalies, like all people who drink moderately, choose to do so to
be comfortably sociable, to relax, or to "loosen up." To drink or
not to drink is a matter of choice for some people. There are other
people, however, who either have lost the ability to choose or have
never had this ability to begin with. Having lost the ability to
say "no" is a disease called alcoholism.
By the
time I entered Yale in the mid-1940s, I had already experienced
some loss of choice. I had no reason to believe that my student
lifestyle was different from that of my friends and classmates.
My academic standing was good. I was invited to join Tau Beta Pi
and was elected president of the chapter. I enjoyed playing the
piano and the trombone in the Yale Band. I graduated with honors.
During
these years, the disease of alcoholism progressed, encouraged by
the University atmosphere. Mory's,
the Duncan Hotel, and the Anchor bar were within a few steps of
my room and served as pleasant sanctuaries to which I could retreat.
Yale's attitude toward alcohol was demonstrated by free college
beer parties, which I enjoyed immensely.
After
graduation, I enjoyed a reasonably successful business career and
had a family with five children. Being totally ignorant of the disease
that plagued me, I continued to drink. After 25 or 30 years of medically
baffling stomach pains, progressively poor health, and a constant
feeling of depression, I was driven to seek help -- first by hospitalization
and then from Alcoholics Anonymous.
It appears
to me today that perhaps some education on alcoholism during my
stay at Yale, although perhaps not preventing the disease, might
have stimulated my desire to seek help sooner.
Gene
Lakso '46
Oak Bluffs, MA

Corrections
In
the March issue, we misstated the year in which Thorstein Veblen
earned his PhD, which was 1884, not 1862; Calvin Hill graduated
in 1969, not 1959; DKE and most of the other Greek-letter fraternities
did not leave the campus until the early 1970s; Jane Kaczmarek '82MFA
was wrongly identified as Sam; the quote attributed to Thornton
Wilder '20 came from The Matchmaker, not The Skin of Our
Teeth; and because of an editing error, In Christi Gloria,
which was quoted in Dan Oren's article on the Yale Seal as Harvard's
early motto, was translated as "Glory in Christ" -- it should have
read "For the Glory of Christ."
Our
worst record was in the "Great Moments
in Sports" section, in which the following mistakes have been
detected: The upset of a heavily favored Princeton football team
by 11 Yale starters who played the entire game took place in 1934,
not 1932; the swimming team's record streak of 201 consecutive dual-meet
victories began in 1945, not 1940; the score of the 1968 football
game against Harvard stood at Yale 29, Harvard 13 when Harvard began
the 16-point, fourth-quarter rally that ended in the 29-29 tie;
Yale's "worst-ever" football loss -- to the University of Hawaii,
in 1987 -- ended in a score of 62-10, not 62-0.
We
apologize for the errors, and salute the sharp-eyed readers who
brought them to our attention!
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