Food for Thought Diversity of Opinion Tradition and Longevity Image Oversight
Impassioned Right Site Party
Parity Wrong Word Hart's
Art
Food for Thought
I think your low-carb article was great ["The Skinny on the
Low-Carb Craze," September-October 2004], but what I don't understand
is that if it is important enough to put on your cover, why aren't
the Duke students benefiting from any of this? Have any of you tried
to eat in a Duke campus facility lately? It is filled with high-fat
and high-carb foods. Even The Chronicle acknowledged in an August
article that food in the Marketplace was terrible. Why can't we do
better for our kids?
Eileen Fischmann
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Diversity of Opinion
I applaud Duke for hosting the fourth National Student Conference
of the Palestine Solidarity Movement [Gazette, "Controversial
Conference," September-October 2004] and "for providing
an environment for the safe and open airing of controversial ideas."
The entire world, except for Israel and the United States, understands
that there are two sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For
forty years, Israel has occupied and enslaved millions of Palestinians,
and continues to add thousands of new settlers yearly to the West
Bank, which is clearly against international law. Now Israel is building
a monstrous wall that runs miles into existing Palestinian territory,
which will deny these Palestinians access to their work, fields,
schools, and neighboring towns.
The influential, wealthy pro-Israel lobby controls our Congress and
administration. I am glad to see that they don't control Duke University.
Ray Gordon
Baltimore, Maryland
As a Jew, I am particularly concerned with
the university's decision to allow the Palestine Solidarity Movement
(PSM) to hold its annual conference on Duke property. The
PSM and its parent, the International Solidarity Movement, repeatedly
call for violence against Jews (and Christians) and work in concert
with the murderous Islamic Jihad and Hamas groups in Israel. Anyone
who has followed the issue of terrorism in Israel for more than
five minutes knows this.
Duke's decision on this matter, as defended in the administration's
nearly nauseating Q&A document, is political correctness taken
to the extreme. Does anyone believe that university officials
would grant meeting space to the Ku Klux Klan--or to groups that
advocate killing abortion doctors--or to groups that support harming
homosexuals? They wouldn't, and they shouldn't. Tolerating a diversity
of opinion is vital to a university community, but such tolerance
must have boundaries. I would think that the opinions of
groups who advocate the bombing of school buses would fall outside
of those boundaries.
Paul S. Teller '93
Washington, D.C.
Tradition and Longevity
I thoroughly enjoyed the latest issue of the Duke Magazine, especially
the comments of Professor Mary McClintock Fulkerson, who rightly
points out the selectiveness of appeal to tradition [Quad
Quotes, "On
the Record," September-October 2004]. She might have pointed
out that the ban of abortion, which is an important part of the
political agenda of both the Catholic and fundamentalist Protestant
sects, is not well founded in tradition either. For example,
the writings of St. Augustine and those of later writers, as
well, were quite ambivalent on the subject of when a fetus could
be considered a human being. The present attitudes of the religious
right are caused, in my opinion, by a morbid obsession with sex.
On another note, I read the obituary of Katherine Markham Johnson
'30, who you say is survived by a sister, Ruby Markham Drakeford
'12. That would make Mrs. Drakeford something like 112 years old,
assuming she graduated at a normal age of, say, twenty. Is this
possible?
Paul Zweifel Ph.D. '54
Radford, Virginia
Drakeford was born January 25, 1892, so she is almost 113.
Image Oversight
Your article "Taking Women's Issues on the Road" [Register,
September-October] missed the opportunity to show photographs of
women important to the initiative and women listed in the article
as participating in the panel. It is ironic that you chose a man
to feature in the photographs with women looking up at him in admiration,
a traditional pose for a photograph showing the relationship between
men and women, for the article.
I wish you had pictured Dr. Susan Roth, who was one of my professors
at Duke. She was important to the initiative and is a female "success" story,
having built her career at Duke.
Barbara Twombley-Herrick '76
Macungie, Pennsylvania
Impassioned
I was appalled but not especially surprised by Dr. Annabel Wharton's
comments [Quad Quotes, "On the Record," July-August
2004]. Although each of her points is worthy of comment, to be
brief, I will focus on her charges of anti-Semitism.
First, Dr. Wharton's claim that Gibson's film [The Passion of
the Christ] is anti-Semitic is absurd unless one is also willing to
extend that accusation to the Gospels themselves, of which it is
a fairly careful rendering. It is even more absurd to base that
claim on a few vague and superficial similarities between aspects
of the film and the artwork or actions of individuals in Church
history. For me and others I know, the film is an intensely personal
one that triggered grief, love, gratitude, and a strong desire
to repay Jesus' sacrifice by living the kind of life that would
make Him proud. It did not trigger anti-Semitism.
Second, her suggestion that the "pre-Vatican II" Catholic
Church was anti-Semitic is also demonstrably wrong. Multiple papal
directives were issued throughout Church history denouncing the
persecution of Jews, e.g., Gregory I (590-604), Alexander II (1061-1073),
and Clement VI (1342-1352). In fact, of all the institutions in
the Middle Ages and later, the Vatican was the only one to consistently
forbid such persecution. Of course, atrocities were committed against
Jews, but these were, with some rare exceptions, uniformly instigated
by secular authorities not under Vatican control (albeit sometimes
with the complicity of local clergy).
Sadly, Dr. Wharton's criticisms seem to be, at best, misguided
and, at worst, a reflection of the growing anti-Christian stereotyping
that appears to be so fashionable these days. In the end, hers
is an effort unworthy of her position--an exercise in name-calling,
masquerading as scholarship.
Edmund Haskins '72
Carmel, Indiana
Professor Wharton's attempt to trivialize Christianity is both
pathetic and appalling. I did take several art-history classes
as a Duke student, as the professor recommends. However, the only
Duke courses that provided information and insights in the development
of my personal faith came out of the religion department. These
courses, along with the now well-tattered Bible that I was given
at graduation, have served me quite well in my life. I respectfully
suggest that the good professor stick to art and leave theology
to others better informed and better qualified to teach it.
Harry Nolan '64
Atlanta, Georgia
Right Site
I notice that the commentary [Gallery, "Seville in the Sunlight," May-June
2004] on this painting states, "On the left is the Giralda,
the twelfth-century mosque...." In fact, the edifice on the
right is La Catedral de Sevilla y La Giralda, reportedly the largest
Gothic church in the world and among the most famous landmarks
of Seville.
The Giralda tower was originally a minaret. It is crowned by a
3,000-pound statue of Faith, which serves as a weathervane--hence,
Giralda, from the [Spanish] verb girar, which means "to turn
around."
Francis A.E. Micara '44
Daytona Beach Shores, Florida
You are correct. In the production process, the image was inadvertently
reversed, as was the image on page 14 in the September-October
issue. The problem has been corrected.
Party Parity
With respect to the article "Debating Party Parity in Faculty
Population" in the May-June 2004 Gazette, I commend President
Keohane for weighing in, and particularly embrace her statement
that strength of teaching includes "ensuring that classrooms
are open to diverse, often contrary views." I also commend
the provost for hosting the panel discussion.
My experience is that the arrogance of academia, evinced in the
quote from Professor Munger, is much broader and more pervasive
than some of the panelists admit.
Unfortunately, my experience as a student and since, in working
with faculty members across the country, is that they are impatient
with, and not open to, views contrary to their own, whether liberal
or conservative.
In my pro bono activity, I participated in and later chaired the
effort to rationalize the law of payments, particularly for electronic
methods. A Harvard law professor was the reporter for that project.
At a dinner following a day of deliberations, he recounted the
bitter battles within the Harvard faculty on appointments of faculty,
largely based on liberal bias.
At my 45th reunion at Duke in 2001, one seminar on intellectual
property attacked the Uniform Computer Information Transactions
Act (UCITA) with misstatements, in my view, of the current law
and the Act. I identified myself as chair of that drafting committee,
asked for an opportunity for rebuttal, and suggested that the IP
faculty sponsor a forum on the evolving law of electronic commerce.
I have followed up, without success, in having Duke sponsor a fair
dialogue on electronic contracting. I have yet to have a response.
My point is that there is bias within academia that should be balanced
by diversity of viewpoint. Otherwise, education becomes insular
and fails to achieve the critical thought to which universities
aspire.
Carlyle C. Ring Jr. J.D. '56
Washington, D.C.
Wrong Word
During my last semester at Duke, I directed
a play by Jean Genet called The Blacks: A Clown Show, about which
Duke Magazine ran a story [Gazette, "Power Play," May-June
2004]. Before I had even read the story in May, my grandmother
asked me about my "interesting" word choice during a
post-play discussion: I was quoted in the article as saying I was "pissed
off" at something.
Skeptical, I watched the tape of this particular discussion to
reassure myself that I hadn't publicly, and in a formal discussion,
used words foul enough to offend my grandmother. I hadn't; I had
said "angry," and later, "mad."
While Duke Magazine's policy of employing student writers seems
natural and positive, these writers must be held to the same level
of journalistic integrity as any accredited publication with as
wide a distribution as Duke Magazine. I was quoted incorrectly
due to sloppy journalism. Had the writer checked the quote with
me, or recorded the discussion in question, I might have been spared
the small but embarrassing task of apologizing to my family and
friends for a slip-of-the-tongue that I did not, in fact, make.
Mary Adkins '04
Greenville, South Carolina
The writer's mistake was unintentional. All of our writers are
held to the highest level of journalistic integrity. We apologize
for the error.
Hart's Art
The article on the renovation of Hart House
[Gazette, March-April 2004] gave me special pleasure because of
old memories. When I completed a basic ROTC course in 1951, the
Korean War was still going on, and I applied for the advanced ROTC
course. For that, one had to take a physical, and I failed to pass
because of a newly discovered hernia.
In my senior year at Duke, the Air Force developed a great need
for meteorologists and offered a direct commission to anyone who
qualified. Expecting to graduate with a B.S. in physics, I figured
I might qualify if the hernia was repaired. I applied and was accepted.
I spent Christmas vacation 1952 in Duke Hospital, where Dr. J.D.
Hart, then chief of surgery, repaired my hernia. I remember listening
to the radio, to Bob Hope entertaining our troops in Korea, and
I laughed so hard it hurt.
I went to Fort Bragg for my physical, where the examining doctor
took special interest in my fresh scar and wanted to know who did
the operation. When I told him Dr. Hart, he said, "Ah, the
old man himself!" Clearly, Hart's work was well known, but
his fame was not limited to North Carolina. Later, in Texas, where
I reported for training, the examining doctor asked the same question
and returned the same expression of admiration for Dr. Hart.
The Air Force sent me to FSU to study meteorology, and I served
three years in Japan. One tour flying aerial weather reconnaissance
at least took me over Korea, where once we were in the eye of a
typhoon just as it made landfall.
Needless to say, I was especially proud when Dr. Hart became president
of Duke. Perhaps someday I'll get to visit his former home near
the campus.
Donald C. Gaby '53
Daytona Beach, Florida
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