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We
welcome readers' letters, which should be mailed to: Letters Editor,
Yale Alumni Magazine, P.O. Box 1905, New Haven, CT 06509-1905;
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Letters
October 2002
Wrestling
with Title IX
I was
moved to write by the short blurb
in the Light & Verity section of the Summer Yale
Alumni Magazine
regarding
the Yale Wrestling Association taking part in a lawsuit challenging
Title IX because it alleges that Title IX is reverse discrimination.
To me, a woman athlete (crew and rugby) who benefited from previous
Title IX fights, this seems like a huge step backwards, one that
makes the Yale wrestling community seem terribly short-sighted and
even misogynistic. It would make more sense to simply start a women's
wrestling program.
Many
high schools in the U.S. offer girls' wrestling either as a separate
program or alongside the boys, but only six U.S. colleges and universities
have women's programs. The girls coming up in wrestling have few
options if they want to continue the sport. In addition, there are
likely many other girls and women who would love to wrestle if they
were given the chance: Girls and women have been joining traditionally
male sports (such as ice hockey and rugby) in record numbers, and
they have been doing martial arts for years.
There
are many reasons why Yale should start a women's team, and no reason
why it should not. In the words of Doug Reese, the coach of the
University of Minnesota-Morris women's wrestling team: "It's an
inexpensive sport, especially if you already have a men's team.
It seems like a no-brainer."
Harmony
Folz '92
Vancouver, BC

A
Modern Miracle
Kudos
to Yale and David M. Schwarz Architectural Services on the design
of the new Environmental Science Center ("Designed
for Science," May). Judging from the photographs, the building
successfully combines modern simplicity and airiness with traditional
grace and solidity, both outdoors and in.
The attention
to continuity with Yale's neo-Gothic architecture is also encouraging.
The ESC is one more cheering sign that, in the world of architecture,
"modern" is no longer synonymous with "stark."
Sara
S. Frear '82
papilia@aol.com
Auburn, AL

Graduation
Blues
President
Levin, in his 2002 Baccalaureate Address to graduating seniors and
their families, tried to counter the barbarism and savagery of September
11 with the banalities of moderation, tolerance, and enlightenment
("Thinking About September 11,"
Sum.). Who could be against such lofty goals, even if they are unlikely
to be achieved through the exercise of the will in which he places
such confidence?
Moreover,
President Levin mistakenly condemns the attitudes of our enemies
on the basis that they emanate from "deeply held and profoundly
conservative religious beliefs" and that they embody utopian visions
of the future based on the enduring reality of absolutes. In their
place, he suggests that each of us construct our own realities out
of those authorities in which we find meaning. It is precisely such
relativism that causes our enemies to doubt those cherished democratic
ideals which President Levin thinks, more or less, America should
still export. I say "more or less" because he goes on to say, "We
should tailor our expectations . for those cultures that do not
share our conception of human rights."
I have
less confidence than President Levin in our unaided ability to will
righteousness into being, because I have a darker understanding
of human nature than, say, Jefferson, who saw no need for redemption.
But I am also more confident than President Levin in the importance
and value of visions of the ideal society -- as long as they are
not enforced by political means. Such visions animated many who
founded this nation, and continue to give moral coherence to many
who lead it. It was Chesterton who once said, "As long as the vision
of heaven is always changing, the vision of earth will remain the
same. The modern young person will never change their world -- because
they will always change their mind."
The
Rev. Dr. Peter C. Moore '58
Sewickley, PA
As a recent
proud graduate of Yale College, I would like to share my great disappointment
at the Baccalaureate speech delivered by President Levin at Commencement
weekend and reprinted in the Summer the
Yale Alumni Magazine.
I, along with many of my fellow students and my family (both my
parents are Yale graduates as well), felt that the speech reflected
poorly on both Yale as an academic institution and on President
Levin.
By speaking
of having "toleration" for "those who fail to embrace our values"
(rather than simply "those who do not embrace 'our' values"), Levin
made clear the chauvinistic tenor of his speech, and it did not
waver. He spoke consistently of "us" and "them," of "civilization"
and "barbarism," and continually made the jingoistic equation of
the United States of America with "freedom" since the beginning
of its history. In this regard, it is simply irresponsible to ignore
the many instances in which the United States has acted against
the freedom of both her own citizens and those of other nations
-- to gloss over the shameful history of African slavery (yes, the
Jefferson Levin held up as such a beacon of liberty was a slaveholder),
or the hundreds of thousands of innocent deaths our military and
CIA have been directly responsible for over the past century in
Hiroshima, Southeast Asia, and Latin America. This is not to say
that the atrocities committed by the United States nullify all that
is great about our country, nor is it to say that we should not
all be very proud of the rights and responsibilities bestowed upon
us as American citizens: It is only to say that no nation in the
world can be, nor should be, held up as an unambiguous paragon of
virtue.
The academy,
and especially one of its leading global representatives such as
Yale, should live up to its historical function as a space where
values of universalist humanism, reason, and critical thought may
be upheld. Quite simply, vulgar nationalism and dogmatism are out
of place, and I was ashamed to see them on display in Levin's speech.
It was a disappointing way to summate a college career at Yale,
where I have been taught by a great many brilliant and humane people
that such simplistic thought dehumanizes us all, and indeed contributes
to the terrible violence we have witnessed over the past year.
Joshua
Jelly-Schapiro '02
Montpelier, VT

A
Musical Note
A few
thoughts after reading "Making Music
Matter" (Sum.):
The decisive
factor in the quality of the art created in any specific time and
place is not the artist, but the patron. Given a great patron, great
art will appear. A great patron is an individual or institution
that holds clear values relating to essentials of the human condition,
is willing and able to sustain artists whose work expresses those
values, and has the discernment to recognize work that is supreme
in expressive power. Such patrons are rare, but the history of art
is the history of their flourishing: e.g. the government of Athens
in the 5th century B.C. (Sophocles, the Parthenon), the Roman Catholic
Church from the 6th to the 16th century (Gregorian chant, Chartres,
Palestrina), the Viennese aristocracy of the 18th century (Haydn,
Beethoven), the Viennese bourgeoisie of the 19th century (Brahms,
Mahler), etc.
In the
20th century, the landed aristocracy having faded and the bourgeoisie
having become obsessed with material and social status, patronage
of the arts has fallen to academia. Unfortunately, academia does
not give primacy to values that are of fundamental human concern.
Academia's reigning value is intellectual superiority, demonstrated
in acute perception of subtle relationships among symbols and phenomena.
Therefore, academia perceives art as an occasion for analytical
gymnastics. The works of art that are most fertile in opportunities
for such contests are those that verge on -- or achieve -- unintelligibility.
In music, academia has fostered Schoenberg, Cage, Glass, and other
initiators of sufficiently obscure orthodoxies whose compositions,
when performed, persuade most of the general concert-going audience
not to return for more. Thus, viable classical music has been reduced
to a fixed body of antiques progressively less relevant to our time,
symphony orchestras are folding, and performance opportunities for
classical musicians are dwindling toward naught.
I, therefore,
disagree with Anthony Tommasini's claim that (what is left of) the
audience needs educating. I believe that musical academia needs
educating -- needs to understand that music is not primarily an
intellectual exercise, but a spiritual one, and that readily intelligible
contemporary music is not to be greeted as beneath condescension.
In short, musical academia must become a great patron, or classical
music will die.
In the
interest of disclosure, I must mention that I am a non-academic
composer whose work has been received with enthusiasm by the general
audience in southern New England for nearly half a century.
Charles
Frink '51, '56PhD
New London, CT

Lindy
Brought to Life
Regarding
Charles Lindbergh donating his papers to Yale ("Lindbergh
in New Haven," May), I would like to point out an earlier Lindbergh-Yale
connection.
My grandfather,
Theodore W. Case '12, invented sound movies. Using his new sound-on-film
technology, Ted Case documented Lindbergh's takeoff, rushed back
to Manhattan to process the film, and showed it that afternoon at
the Roxy Theatre. While Lindy was somewhere over the Atlantic, incommunicado,
there were lines around the block in Times Square.
It was
the first time in history that people were able to see and
hear one of the great events of the day. Television was decades
away. People got their news from radio, newspapers, and silent films.
The Lindbergh newsreel caused such a sensation that Case and his
partner, William Fox, had over 50 Movietone crews in place around
the world within a year. Case and Fox created what we now know as
the nightly news.
Case
conceived the technology underlying sound films as a Yale junior.
In a letter to his mother, dated January 21, 1911, Case wrote: "Most
of my time now is taken up in experimenting with my selenium cell
with the idea in mind of photographing sound waves and using the
positives as records for a new kind of phonograph, or rather it
would be called lightograph, I suppose." A month later, he wrote:
"Yesterday, I at last succeeded in transmitting sound by light.
The reproduction of the voice was perfect."
Case's
few months of part-time work changed the world. The Lindbergh film
was the first great success of the talking pictures era. Four months
later, Case and F. W. Murnau collaborated on the feature film Sunrise.
In the first year the Academy Awards were given out, Sunrise
received three Oscars. One Oscar, for Most Artistic and Unique Film,
has never been awarded since. That particular award seems to have
been an acknowledgement that Sunrise was the first talking
picture, a month before Al Jolson's The Jazz Singer.
The combined
PR juggernauts of the brothers Warner and General Electric, who
had a competing system of a phonograph record synced up to a silent
movie, have managed to obscure the historical records on this point,
but every film school graduate knows the truth. And, of course,
the WB/GE system soon proved to be a dead end, while the optical
track is now the dominant technology.
I wanted
my fellow Yalies to know that when you see Lindbergh taking off
on his epic voyage, you are seeing -- and hearing -- the work of
two great men, one a fellow Eli.
Michael
Case Kissel '71
mike@kmamusic.com
New York, NY

Twist
in the Business
"Business
with a Twist" (Mar.) notes that SOM's three-year program in
management and environment was cited as one of the best in the evaluation
"Beyond Grey Pinstripes 2001: Preparing MBAs for Social and Environmental
Stewardship." As co-authors of this Aspen Institute/World Resources
Institute report, we acknowledge the excellence of the environment
and management program, but we wish to note that the recognition
SOM received was based on a much broader set of activities.
First,
SOM rated among world leaders for its coverage of social impact
management as well as its top rating in environmental subjects.
Second, SOM rated highly in environmental coursework not primarily
for the joint degree with FES, which attracts relatively few students,
but for covering environmental subjects in courses available to
all SOM students. Finally, courses and degrees available to students
comprised only one category of evaluation. SOM faculty have strong
research records, particularly in environmental areas. SOM also
provides excellent institutional support in the form of conferences
and speakers, internship funds, loan forgiveness, and more. Attributing
SOM's strengths only to the joint program with FES shortchanges
the School's records of innovation and achievement.
SOM cannot
rest on its laurels. Our biennial "Beyond Grey Pinstripes" reports
have identified many top-ranked schools that are now developing
innovative, comprehensive approaches to social and environmental
topics in management. SOM should take care not to surrender its
historic leadership in these areas in its quest to become an "unabashed,
hard-edged" business school.
Rick
Bunch '85
World Resources Institute
rickb@wri.org
Judy Samuelson '82MPPM
Aspen ISIB
Washington, DC

Correction
A letter
in the Summer
Yale Alumni Magazine
about the History of Arts and Letters program confused two professors
in the program. Joseph Curtiss was an English professor; Lewis Curtis
was a history professor.  |
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