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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;
faxed to: (203) 432-0651; or sent 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 via e-mail.
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Letters
April 2003
The
Campus Pulls Together
I am an alumnus of Yale
College who has had the privilege of volunteering in the athletics
department for the last two years. Because of this, I was able to
participate in a small way to help relieve the grief that permeated
our campus following the loss of Yale students in an automobile
accident ("Light & Verity,"
Mar.). This also allowed me to observe firsthand what a truly great
family our alma mater is.
I have to commend the
University's administration from President Levin down, Yale College's
administration guided by Dean Brodhead, and the athletics department
so ably led by athletics director Tom Beckett. The caring of these
groups for those involved was evident in every move we made.
I am truly proud to
say that I am a Yale alumnus and that these people run my alma mater.
Donald
F. Scharf '55
Madison, CT

More
Fictional Yalies
Your selection of Sherman
McCoy as one of "The Ten Greatest
Yalies Who Never Were" in the February Yale
Alumni Magazine
brings to
mind Tom Wolfe's frequent mention in The Bonfire of the Vanities
of McCoy's "Yale chin."
Never heard of it.
How does one get one? Can one of your readers or perhaps Tom Wolfe
describe it?
My father, an uncle,
my brother, and I are all Yale graduates, and we don't even have
"Reynolds chins," much less chins that would mark us as Yalies.
Robert
K. Reynolds '45W
Danbury, CT
Another fictional Yalie
who deserves recognition is Danny, the hero of the novel Joe
College, written by Tom Perrotta and published in 2000. The
author, a 1983 graduate of Yale, captures the feel of the Yale experience
in the early 1980s. For those who haven't read this wonderful book,
check it out.
Bob
Mittl '81, '81MS
rmittl@aol.com
Charlotte, NC

Schooling
for the Bomb?
Reading with interest
(and some nostalgia) your article, "When Yale Schooled for War"
("Old Yale," Dec.), I realized
that I may have found a way to obtain the answer to a question concerning
my first summer at Yale.
When I entered Yale
in July 1942, with the Class of 1945W, I ended up in a physics course
that seemed to me to have no direction and that used a mimeographed
text. I went on to graduate from Yale in February 1948. I did not
pursue physics.
It was only after reading
Heisenberg's War, the story of the German nuclear physicist,
that I began to realize that the physics course of the summer of
1942 may have had some connection with the Manhattan Project. The
subjects covered seemed to bear no logical relationship to one another,
but they fell in place in the story of the development of thought
on the structure of the atom.
Later, I read another
book that covered much of the same ground, and I became convinced
that my suspicions were correct. Can anyone fill in the blanks?
I do believe that at least one person in the summer physics course
went on to the Manhattan Project.
If I am correct, Yale
was more deeply involved in the war than just ROTC (of which I was
a member) and the active units on the Old Campus. Walking to class
with the Glenn Miller band playing "The Saints" in the distance
was something I would never forget.
Peter
Van Dyk Berg '45W, '52JD
New York, NY

Divestment
Concerns
This refers to your
article in the February issue concerning proposals for Yale's divestment
of stock holdings in companies doing business in Israel ("Light
& Verity"). It is against U.S. law to support a boycott
of Israel. In my law practice, we encounter demands made by certain
foreign trademark offices that trademark applicants sign declarations
supporting the Arab boycott of Israel. Federal law requires that
such demands may not be honored.
Rob
Kunstadt '72
New York, NY
I am writing concerning
your coverage of "Campus Debates Israel
Divestment."
In 1971, my husband
Neiel Baronberg '62 and I spent several months in Karachi, Pakistan.
During that time, I heard and read in the state-sponsored newspaper
the most virulent anti-Jewish statements I had ever come across.
I was also told by influential Pakistanis that it would be dangerous
to let anyone know that we were Jewish.
Twenty-five years later,
after a visit in Israel, my daughter Sabrina Baronberg '01 was not
allowed into any Middle Eastern country (with the exception of Egypt
and Jordan) because she had an Israeli stamp on her passport. Today,
little has changed, except that we are now better informed about
the rampant racism taught in Arab countries, the official Saudi
policies against religious liberty, the Palestinian textbooks with
racism throughout, and the limited rights for women. Indeed, we
have frequent examples of killings in Sudan and Indonesia just because
people are Christian, or in Kenya because they are Israeli.
Why, I ask, does Sam
Bernstein '05 not organize divestment movements for those countries?
I would also like to suggest to those working so hard for divestment
that they put their time and energy into something positive. Both
the Israeli and Palestinian economies and peoples have been hurt
physically, financially, and emotionally by terrorism. Can't you
help in some positive way instead of trying to make even more people
even more miserable?
Joan
Baronberg
njbaron@frii.com
Denver, CO

Corrections
In the December "Light
& Verity" article about the new Henry Koerner Center for Emeritus
Faculty, and in a subsequent correction in the February issue, we
identified one of the donors, Joseph Koerner, as a member of the
Class of 1971. He is, in fact, a member of the Class of 1980.
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