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Letters
March 2003
Hankering
for More
I enjoyed Mark Branch's
article on "The Ten Greatest Yalies
Who Never Were" (Feb.). I thought Tom Hanks might deserve special
mention since he played two different Yalies. Besides Sherman McCoy,
he also played the role of Lawrence Bourne III in Volunteers, a 1985 movie. This last role was an especially satirical and amusing
look at the wealthy, privileged Yale grad.
Paul Matz '87
Birmingham, AL

A
Costly War on Drugs
I'd like a puff of
whatever Subrata K. Sen of the Yale School of Management was smoking
when coming to the conclusion that the anti-drug "Brain on Drugs"
TV ads were effective at reducing drug use among teenagers ("Light
& Verity," Nov.). Even the "drug czar" John Walters has
admitted publicly that the whole costly series of ads was a colossal
waste of money, if not actually counterproductive.
To start with, the
basic drug-war concept of lumping together the hard drugs (heroin,
cocaine) and soft drugs (marijuana) dooms any such anti-drug education
efforts to failure, because kids (at least my kids and grandkids)
are not so stupid as to believe that pot is equally as dangerous
as cocaine and heroin. Their peer group experience tells them they
are being lied to about pot, and then it is not much of a stretch
for kids to mistrust and ignore the information about the truly
dangerous hard drugs. They then feel free to experiment.
The Partnership for
a Drug-Free America (PDFA), supported by (among many others) liquor
and tobacco companies, plays fast and loose with exaggerations of
marijuana harms, while ignoring the harms and prevalence of the
more damaging drug, alcohol (which obviously doesn't make it onto
the list of drugs America should be free from).
I think it is an iffy
thing for Yale to be playing footsie with the PDFA.
Columbia University's
espousal of former Health, Education, and Welfare secretary Joe
Califano's National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA)
has prompted serious questions to be raised before the University
Senate. Critics fear CASA is compromising academic integrity by
releasing to the media results of "research" that has often not
been peer reviewed, and is, in effect, used as drug-war propaganda.
Yale would do well
to be careful about getting involved with imprimaturs to policies
relating to our misguided, deceitful, and ineffective drug war.
David L. Edwards '51, M.D.
Olympia, WA

Military
Threats
The Yale Alumni Magazine has yet another article demonstrating the Yale administration's
hostility to the U.S. military ("Light
& Verity," Nov.). There is apparently a team of Yale lawyers
fighting a law that compels Yale to permit military recruiters on
campus.
As usual, the issue
is discrimination against homosexuals. The military's discriminatory
policy was determined by our elected representatives in government,
and there is little chance the policy will change anytime soon.
In the meantime, there
are other problems facing the military: namely, Al Qaeda, Iraq,
and North Korea. Some of us believe these other problems carry a
little more weight.
Unfortunately, the
Yale administration seems to lack the perspective to have figured
this out. Maybe if more Yale administrators had some experience
with the military, they would exercise better judgment. Looking
around myself here in Kosovo, though, I do not see many Ivy Leaguers,
gay or straight.
Sometimes, I wish we
still had the draft. Then the elites would realize that the military,
warts and all, is theirs as well. Maybe then they would not merely
criticize the military's faults and deplore its errors. Maybe they
would actually help it perform its mission, or at least stay out
of the way.
Paul Cunningham '92
Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo
Yale is altogether too
timid in its submission to military recruiters' demand for access
to (heterosexual) students, under threat of losing federal funding.
Federal funding to research universities cannot be easily withdrawn.
It is granted because many branches of government (civilian and
military) could not function without the results of the research.
Individually, universities
are vulnerable to threats to their funding, but collectively, they
are in a powerful position, holding an asset (the skills of their
scientific faculty) that cannot be obtained elsewhere. If the universities
joined together in united refusal, the military would soon have
to back down.
William Kessler '71
Seattle, WA

A
Return to Machu Picchu
It would seem not only
repugnant and sacrilegious to disinter my grandfather Hiram Bingham's
bones in order to try to argue with your article, "Rediscovering
Machu Picchu" (Dec.), it might also be rather useless. I am
very grateful that after 85 years, Yale's Peabody Museum has overcome
the taboo hanging over my grandfather's Machu Picchu booty to bring
it out of the basement and to spend the time and the money to piece
together a beautiful, new exhibit. However, I am not happy with
the article's rather dull assessment of Machu Picchu itself.
Machu Picchu is not
just a pretty place ("picked out.simply because it was so beautiful").
In recent years, the Dalai Lama has spoken of a spiritual shift
from Tibet's Himalayas to Peru's Andes, called "the ancestors" by
the Quechuan descendants of the Incas. No laser technique can dispute
such a view. Nor can scientific details override the pure and holistic
experience of being in that holy temple to the sun, the moon, and
the once sacred four directions.
Now that the remnants
have been returned to the light of day, thought should be given
to the eventual return of the bones and the relics to the sacred
ground of Peru. Hiram Bingham was prematurely and wrongly banished
from Peru in 1915, aborting his mission to uncover other important
sites -- a fact that embittered him for the rest of his life. He
was invited to return for the first time in 1948, at the twilight
of his life. Only after this experience could he bring himself to
write with the joy of an adventurer the book that continues to sell
steadily to this day, The Lost City of the Incas.
Ben Bingham '72
bbingham@dca.net
West Chester, PA

What
to Require?
Why, in this new era
of American diversity, world commerce, and global terrorism, would
Professor Donald Brown propose to abolish Yale's foreign language
requirement ("AYA Fall Assembly,"
Dec.)? Yale graduates, especially health workers, lawyers, and educators,
must be ready to serve the 25 million Americans (and counting) who
speak Spanish. Those in finance and industry will need language
skills to win friends in emerging markets or to help poverty-stricken
peoples. Those in diplomacy should, for example, learn Arabic if
they have sincere aspirations of building peace with and within
the Middle East.
The 21st century is
no time for monolingual complacency. Domestic demographics and geopolitical
realities will require many more Yale graduates to speak Spanish,
Mandarin, Hindi-Urdu, or Arabic. It is Yale's responsibility to
anticipate this need.
Michael Singer '95, '00PhD, '02MD
mssinger@partners.org
Boston, MA

Class
Action
I am glad that the
labor unions have protested Yale's refusal to allow unions for its
employees ("Light & Verity,"
Nov.). I am also pleased that the unions delayed until activist-minded
students could return to campus to join the pro-union demonstrations.
I voted for a pro-union Divinity School graduate for the Yale Corporation.
I thought that it was necessary to have a pro-union member on the
board since the usual trustees are mostly rich and against unions.
After a year in Oxford
on a fellowship, I came back to Dwight Hall. I worked closely with
poor people, a range of union organizers, and a variety of outside
radicals. I helped organize a free working-class university that
met in a Yale building and had both Yale professors and people from
the wider New Haven community on its faculty. I also worked on a
union-organizing campaign for Yale's non-academic employees.
In 1977, I was asked
to teach a seminar at Yale. At the first class, the non-academic
employees announced a strike. I told the students that they should
investigate the situation and prepare to argue the pros or cons
of the strike at the next class. I also asked them to come up with
proposals for what we as a class should do. I decided to hold the
seminar off campus as a method of supporting the strike. The students
supported my decision and attended the class.
Dave Dellinger '36
Montpelier, VT

Corrections
In the "Sightings"
caption in December's "Light & Verity," we referred to John
Eure as a senior. He actually graduated in 1999 and received his
MS in 2002. |