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Letters
May 2003
Of
Flash, Dink, and Fiction
With reference to the
amusing collection of "The Ten
Greatest Yalies Who Never Were" (Feb.) by Mark Alden Branch,
and with only memory to guide me, I wonder if Flash Gordon, the
out-of-this-world 1930s comic strip hero, should have been included
among them?
Is it possible that
Flash Gordon's creator (and wonderful draftsman) Alex Raymond might
have been a real Yalie?
Itching to know!
Frank L. Warren
fljlw@earthlink.net
Santa Barbara, CA
Mr. Warren is right.
The very first "Flash
Gordon" strip in 1934 (below) identifies the hero as a "Yale
graduate and world-renowned polo player." Alex Raymond, though,
went to Notre Dame. By the way, Buster Crabbe, the brawny Olympic
swimmer who starred in the Flash Gordon movie serials, went to the
University of Southern California -- but he did star in the 1935
football film Hold
'Em Yale. -- Eds.

As any reader of the alumni notes knows, Yale's
fictional alumni are mere shadows of the real offspring of Old Eli.
However, the brief comments on the imaginary John Humperdink Stover
are worthy of note for revealing Owen Johnson's hidden agenda to
give Yale its due for nurturing the intellectual life.
This resonates with
a wayward thought I had recently when I learned the techni-cal meaning
of "stover": every part of the corn plant except the kernel. At
present, these parts are waste. Of course, Stover is a not-uncommon
family name, but I wonder, was Johnson trying to hint something
about Dink?
Incidentally, Dink's
path from jock to scholar is parallel to current efforts to develop
stover as a source of ethanol.
Edward Jay Kaliski '40S
New York, NY

Yale
Summer Program
Loved "A
Slice of Life in Yale, Michigan" (Apr.). Can you tell me when
the 2003 Yale Bologna Festival will be held and how to get information
about it?
Howell Martyn '53
Ellington, CT
This year's festival
will be held July 25-27. For more information, go to www.yalechamber.com
or call (810) 387-9253. -- Eds.

Anti-Drug
Ads Work
Contrary to the claims made by a letter writer (Mar.), the Partnership for a Drug-Free
America accepts no funding from either alcohol or tobacco concerns.
There is no doubt that
hard-hitting, consumer-focused, research-based messages are helping
to change the minds of kids when it comes to drugs. Subrata K. Sen
and his colleagues are hardly the only ones to reach this conclusion;
published studies from researchers at Johns Hopkins University and
the University of Kentucky, among others, also speak to the effectiveness
of our messages. Clearly, something is making a difference in the
effort to reduce demand for illicit drugs: Today, compared to 1985
-- the year before the Partnership was formed -- there are 7.4 million
fewer regular drug users.
No one will suggest
anti-drug ads alone will solve the drug problem, but experts agree
they can make a difference.
Steve Pasierb
President and CEO, Partnership for a Drug-Free America
New York, NY

Baraka
Brouhaha
As an undergraduate
from 1968 to 1972, I was one of the many white Yalies to march in
protest during the Bobby Seale murder trial in 1970. Many of us
shared Kingman Brewster's skepticism about the ability of a black
man to get a fair trial anywhere in America. I was not the only
scrawny Jewish kid from the suburbs showing solidarity for oppressed
blacks. We filled our lungs with tear gas for our troubles and had
National Guardsmen aim rifles at us, which we later learned were
loaded with live ammunition in those angry days, just weeks before
the government-incited student murders at Kent State.
I now live in New Jersey,
and I have watched an angry black man, Amiri Baraka, gain national
notoriety through immature hate mongering. When questioned about
his poem, "Somebody Blew Up America," Mr. Baraka called on the authority
of an Internet hate site. I am embarrassed that he received such
a rousing welcome at Yale ("Faces,"
Apr.), but I am not surprised.
My initial anger over
the poem has turned to sadness. We humans have evolved intellectually
in such a way that we try to reduce even complicated issues to simple
black and white answers. Fear of "the other" is also an evolved
propensity, which clouds our rational thoughts with biased passions.
I realize that it was my mistake to expect more responsibility from
a "poet laureate."
Michael Dee '72
New Jersey

How
Grand the Strategy?
In at least three ways,
John Lewis Gaddis does the Yale undergraduates so "lucky" to take
his course on "Grand Strategy" ("Training
the Next Leaders," Mar.) a great disservice. First, he nourishes
their illusion that there is a short-cut to mastery of "the big
picture." In fact, such mastery comes only through time and experience
and through understanding of a variety of small pictures. Second,
he fools them into believing that "Grand Strategy" itself is anything
but the after-the-fact trick of seeing coherence in a set of measures
taken with very little reference to one another. Finally, the comments
of students interviewed for the article make clear that Professor
Gaddis encourages in them what President Brewster once aptly characterized
as "grim professionalism."
Michael J. Montesano '83
Singapore

Gifts
in Bloom
Thank you for the beautifully
nuanced portrait of Larry Kramer and the eponymous Initiative for
Lesbian and Gay Studies ("Back
in the Fold," Apr.). Larry's support has obviously been
central to defining and expanding lesbian and gay studies at Yale.
However, the Larry Kramer Initiative for Lesbian and Gay Studies,
while vital, does not alone support the field here.
Through the years,
several other important gifts have nourished lesbian and gay studies.
An anonymous gift created the Fund
for Lesbian and Gay Studies Research over a decade ago, supporting
new scholarship through grants to faculty, students, and the libraries.
The Adam R. Rose Teaching Fund continues to support visiting lesbian
and gay studies faculty. The James Robert Brudner
'83 Memorial Prize and Lecture Fund recognizes and awards leading
scholars in the field. The Stephen
T. Baker Professorship underwrites the provision of lesbian
and gay studies at the undergraduate level. And a brand new fund,
the Sarah
Pettit Fund, honors the memory of a recently deceased young
alumna whose efforts helped change the face of journalism for lesbian
and gay people.
In addition to these
funds, numerous other gifts have supported the ever-expanding profile
of lesbian and gay studies. Too numerous to mention, their generous
commitments to both Yale and lesbian and gay studies have long nourished
that seedling these other gifts have caused to burst forth into
full bloom.
Jonathan D. Katz
Executive Coordinator, Larry Kramer Initiative
Marianne LaFrance
Professor of Psychology and Women's and Gender Studies

The
Secretest Society
Having just read Secrets
of the Tomb by Alexandra Robbins '98 ("Faces,"
Feb.), and having kept my own society secrets for more than 50 years,
the time has come to report on Yale's least-known, shortest-lived,
and per capita most academically successful secret society.
The organization I
refer to was known as the Fathers of the American Revolution (FAR).
The four members first came together as participants in the Labor
Party of the Yale Political Union.
Why did we form a secret
society? Other than being at Yale, I do not know the answer. Gerald
Hegarty '46 was probably the organizer. He came from a working-class
Springfield, Massachusetts, family and had a very strong interest
in Yale secret societies. He once broke into Skull and Bones to
see what was inside.
We would all have been
considered black-shoe in the Yale hierarchy of "white-shoe, brown-shoe,
black-shoe." Samuel Huntington '46 could have achieved white-shoe
status, being a descendent of a Connecticut signer of the Declaration
of Independence, but his total commitment to scholarship earned
him his black-shoe status. Murray Gell-Mann '48 had entered Yale
at the age of 13. His youth and obvious genius in physics and mathematics
excluded him from any of the standard categories. I, Harold Morowitz,
was outside of the mainstream at Yale, as I would have been at any
university. Listening to my own drummer, I majored in physics and
philosophy and had not yet acquired my passion for biophysics.
In any case, we met
once a week, shared a bottle of wine, and talked about politics
and how we would change Yale and change the world. It was not all
that exciting, but it was enjoyable.
The society ceased
regular meetings when Gerry graduated and went to the University
of Michigan Law School. I was the next to graduate and went on to
study biophysics at Yale's Graduate School. Then, Sam and Murray
were off to Harvard and MIT to study political science and physics.
A few years later,
we had a JD and three PhDs among us. Gerry became a successful attorney
in his hometown and was very active in community affairs. I spent
most of my career at Yale as professor of molecular biophysics and
biochemistry and Master of Pierson College. I've written 16 or so
books and am now Robinson Professor of Biology and Natural Philosophy
at George Mason University. Sam has been on the faculty of Columbia
and Harvard, where he is now Albert J. Weatherhead III University
Professor. He is the author of The Clash of Civilizations, one of the most influential political science books of our time.
Murray is a Nobel laureate in physics and the Robert Andrews Millikan
Professor Emeritus of Theoretical Physics of the California Institute
of Technology. He is now associated with the Santa Fe Institute
and the University of New Mexico. The members meet each other rarely,
and have, I believe, lost all left-wing political sentiments. Gerry
passed away a few years ago.
That is the basic story.
After reviewing it, I still maintain that FAR is per capita the
most successful Yale secret society, at least in terms of academic
achievement of its members. Let's have three cheers for the black-shoe
brigade. If there is a moral to this story, it is that it probably
could only have happened at Yale. That accounts for the affection
many of us have for our alma mater.
Harold J. Morowitz '47, '51PhD
Fairfax, VA

A
Tragic Flaw
Alas, that the Yale Alumni Magazine should misquote
Shakespeare in the illustration accompanying the March article on
"'Seeing' the Theater" ("Details").
Although this misquotation is all too common, a glance at page 1013
of The Yale Shakespeare would have shown you that what Hamlet
says in "A Churchyard near Elsinore" is not "Alas, poor Yorick,
I knew him well," but "Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio."
Gerry Jonas '57
New York, NY

Corrections
In the March article
"Collateral Damage," we refer
to Deane Keller's son as Deane Keller Jr. His name is Deane G. Keller.
Also, the senior Keller's papers and photographs were donated to
Yale by his wife, Katherine H. Keller, not by his sons.  |