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Letters
Summer 2002
Merry
Month of May
Greetings
to you all! The May issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine is the most satisfying, best written, designed,
and photographed issue of the magazine that I have ever seen.
You
keep working at quality and refinement, and the results are clearly evident.
Ted
Clapp '44BD
Damariscotta, ME

Alcometer's
Inventor
I thought
you would like to know the identity of the professor in the photo
you ran in May's "Vintage YAM. "
It is my grandfather, Leon A. Greenberg '30, '33PhD, who is the
inventor of the Alcometer shown in the picture. He was on the Yale
faculty from 1933 to 1962. During that time, many Yale students
were delighted to be compensated for imbibing alcohol as experimental
subjects for his research studies. His work at Yale led to the adoption
of uniform statutes across the nation relating to drinking and driving.
Jennifer (Jendy) Dennis '98
La Jolla, CA

Lee
vs. Lin
As a
Russian Studies major at Yale in the 1970s, I observed Soviet "elections"
that were conducted more fairly than the 2002 Alumni Fellow election
("Light & Verity," May). Why
was the Yale Corporation so threatened by the candidacy of a prominent
New Haven pastor who cares about Yale and its workers?
The shortsightedness
of the Yale Corporation astounds me. To all but declare war on Yale's
workers and their unions, and on an outstanding New Haven leader,
can only exacerbate town-gown tensions and roil Yale's already troubled
labor-management waters.
Sherrod Brown '74
Washington, DC
Editor's
note: See this month's "Light
& Verity" for a report on the election results.
One has
to chuckle at the Herculean effort by so many to influence the outcome
of the Alumni Fellow election. Opposing this campaigning, one would
have expected a petition, signed by at least 200 faculty (tenured,
of course), admonishing, as unwarranted, this effort against a candidate
sponsored by the local unions. The issue here, to them, would seem
to be of far greater import than awarding a simple doctorate to
Mr. Bush.
H.M.
White Jr. '50
Menham, NJ

Battling
Over ROTC
In the
wake of September 11, our country is at war, and Yale is terribly
negligent in failing to return ROTC to the campus ("Light
& Verity," Apr.). Shuffling off dedicated students to the
program at UConn in Storrs is a cover-up! An obvious start to bringing
ROTC back to Yale would be a major event welcoming recruiters. No
basements -- and let any protesters face the patriotic students
who want to enlist.
The classes
of 1937 and 1943 have spoken, and I believe 1942 will soon!
John C. Chapin '42
Manchester, VT
I read
with sadness and anger that a group of alumni seeks to bring ROTC
back to the Yale campus. This is a shortsighted move with potentially
destructive consequences. Bringing ROTC back to campus sends a clear
message to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered students that
the school community does not care about their rights. Colleges
and universities are too quick to sell out gay students in the face
of expedient pressures. The military specifically bars openly gay,
lesbian, and bisexual people from serving their country. Allowing
ROTC to return will create two classes on campus: those who are
"worthy" of being in the military, and those who are not.
Post-September
11, the military needs to be as strong as possible, yet it still excludes and actively ousts gay service members and excludes prospective
service members who are willing and able to serve. The military's
policy is pure discrimination and is appropriately banned from the
campus. Those alumni who founded Advocates for Yale ROTC should
forget about bringing ROTC to campus and work instead to eradicate
the hypocritical and discriminatory policy of "Don't Ask, Don't
Tell." Until an end is put to this policy, ROTC doesn't belong at
Yale.
Polly Crozier '96
Brookline, MA

Hero,
Villain, Enigma
The
article in the May issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine ("Lindbergh
in New Haven"), with pictures of Lindbergh in uniform and waving
our flag in Paris, leaves out an obvious and important dimension
of its hero.
Lindbergh
not only stood for keeping "out of European wars entirely." He was
also close to the Nazis. He advised them on the importance of air
power, was decorated by them, and was photographed with their leadership.
If he
was, among other things, the "greatest victim" of the century, his
choice of company has to be part of the picture, and it should have
been included in the article. Lindbergh was a hero, a villain, and
an enigma. Too many Yale alumni died in World War II for our magazine
to omit this painful aspect of Lindbergh's life.
Edward H. Rosen '50
Wynnewood, PA
I was
amazed and profoundly disappointed that the Yale Alumni Magazine would print an article about Charles Lindbergh that was transparent
in its attempt to sanitize his bigotry. Jennifer Kaylin refers to
his "alleged anti-Semitism" and then quotes from his shipboard journal entry: "Imagine the United States taking these Jews in in addition
to those we already have. There are too many in places like New
York already. A few Jews add strength and character to a country.
Too many create chaos. And we are getting too many."
Alleged anti-Semitism? If it reads like anti-Semitism, sounds like anti-Semitism,
and smells like anti-Semitism, believe me, it is anti-Semitism.
And what
about the America First Committee, which attracted anti-Semites
to its banner? The Yale chapter, writes Kaylin, invited Lindbergh
to visit the campus in 1941. She conveniently ignores the fact that
at the Committee's meeting on September 11, 1941, Lindbergh called
the Jews the most dangerous force pushing America into war. Liberal
members resigned in protest, but Lindbergh and his cohorts persisted
in their support for the Committee's agenda of xenophobic bigotry.
The Sterling
Memorial Library may be currently exhibiting Lindbergh's archives.
But that is no excuse for a journalistic travesty that offends our
intellectual standards and, more seriously, insults the values of
pluralism and interfaith respect upon which our nation is built.
Rabbi Charles A. Kroloff '55
Westfield, NJ

Shame
on Sports!
In the
April Yale Alumni Magazine, Jacob Remes's "Ban
Slots for Sports?" was a rude awakening. I have always proudly
told my friends and family that there was no such thing as a sports
scholarship in the Ivy League. Apparently, I am wrong. How long
has this been going on? Whom do I write in order to register my
dismay and, more important, get this nonsense stopped? Please tell
Mr. Remes that at least one alumnus agrees with him completely on
this issue.
James C. Shelburne, MD, '54
Newport Beach, CA
I agree
wholeheartedly with every point made by Jacob Remes in his excellent
piece. I would only add that the 35 varsity sports opportunities
in question are now thus denied to students who enter Yale on their
own merits.
Thomas
O. Stanley '49
tstanley@crosslink.net
Oxford, MD

Sheltering
the Flame
Thanks
to Bruce Fellman for his fine portrait of "Lion in Winter" professor
Donald Kagan (Apr. ). In his description
of the program in Western civilization that Kagan had hoped to found
with the ill-fated Bass gift, I heard echoes of the major that defined
my Yale experience in the 1960s. History, the Arts, and Letters
(HAL) was, like Kagan's thwarted model, "comprehensive, intensive,
interdisciplinary," and, with a dozen students admitted each year,
selective.
HAL was
led by the unforgettable team of historian Joseph Curtiss and the
English department's Lewis Curtis, whose natty attire got him known
as the "Duke of Bridgeport." HAL followed roughly the same sequence
of Yale's excellent Humanities program, but was less latitudinarian
about what students might study. All of us read the same texts,
viewed the same artworks, and listened to the same music (the last
presented sparklingly by a young Leon Plantinga, now Professor of
Music). Among both faculty and students, the collegiality was profound,
while the excitement of seeing historical "moments" (from Botticelli's
Florence to Freud's Vienna) emerge in the round made HAL, at least
for me, the very embodiment of what a university education should
be.
I don't
know when HAL was discontinued, or why, although I suspect that
charges of Eurocentrism may have contributed to its demise, as they
did to that of Kagan's project. A pity on both counts. In a University
with so many justifiably acclaimed regional studies programs, the
absence of Western European studies is a curious omission. Kudos
to Professor Kagan for sheltering the flame.
Tad Tuleja '66
Cambridge, MA

The
Art of Science
In recent YAMs, I have read of Yale's commendable efforts to improve
the sciences ("At Home With Science,"
May) and to review the entire curriculum ("A
Fresh Look at the College," April). I thought I might add a
personal retrospective.
In my
days at Yale, I spent a good deal of time up on Science Hill as
a science major. However, what I feel was distinctive about Yale
was the strength and overriding emphasis on the liberal arts and
humanities. Looking back, I think that's what made my four years
at Yale an education.
Late
in my senior year, one of my professors asked what I'd be doing
after Yale. I proudly told him of the very good medical school to
which I'd be going. His face fell, and he commented, "It's a shame
to leave a great university like this to go off to a trade school!"
I later felt there was some truth to what that professor said (despite
the obvious bias).
For about
25 years, I taught in and ran a clerkship in psychiatry, which focused
on the disciplined use of the clinical method to try to understand
the human mind. Some students labeled it the only humanities course
in the medical school. Former liberal arts majors tended to have
an easier time with my clerkship than former science majors -- except
those from Yale.
While
I applaud the timely rebuilding of the sciences, I hope Yale never
loses the strength and even the primacy of the liberal arts and
humanities. I think this may be even more important for those who
will be going on to the "trade schools" in the sciences, medicine,
business, and law.
Mel
Schupack, MD, '56
Fitzwilliam, NH |