Ideological Concerns Education and Religion Full-Service Issue On Arduin Lacrosse Redux Art Controversy Health Courts' Appeal
Ideological Concerns
Robert Bliwise ends his excellent article
on "leftward leanings" in
academe [September-October 2006] with a comforting quote from
an engineering professor at the University of Massachusetts,
a school that is to "left" as chili is to pepper. The
professor "observed that conservative critics don't question
the standing of America's universities as the best in the world—the
same 'outstanding schools' that are 'so often dominated by political
liberals.' He added, 'The liberal minds are there, but the result—the
great American university system—should give these critics pause.' "
The professor should perhaps ask himself whether the undeniably
great reputation of America's best universities rests on their
often-politicized and uniformly left-wing humanities and social-science
faculties, or on their much more diverse and generally un-political
faculties of natural science. The answer may make him slightly
less complacent.
John Staddon
Durham, North Carolina
The writer is James B. Duke Professor of psychology and professor
of biology and neurobiology.
"Leftward
Leanings" describes
how David Horowitz visited Duke last spring to complain about
liberal bias on college campuses. In fact, Horowitz is being
disingenuous in two important areas. First, he is not a conservative,
but rather a neoconservative. While conservatives promote limited
government, secure borders, and free-market principles, neoconservatives
are primarily concerned with using American military power
in the Middle East to foster regime change and to make Israel
more secure. Second,
Horowitz and fellow neocon Daniel Pipes of Campus Watch
attempt to silence and blacklist professors who are either critical
of Israel or favorable to the Palestinians. As a fervent pro-Israel
activist, working in tandem with the powerful Israel lobby, Horowitz
is trying to get Congress to pass a bill that would establish
a federal tribunal to investigate criticism of Israel on American
college campuses. In addition, he rails against the "radicalization
of Mideast studies by liberal-dominated faculties at the nation's
universities."
Hopefully, Duke University will not buy into the false and misleading
agenda of David Horowitz and the neocons.
Ray Gordon
Baltimore, Maryland
Thank you for a reasonably balanced
article tackling the subject of "leftward"-leaning
faculty bias. Most schools shy away from the subject primarily
because they are extremely imbalanced, and fear scrutiny with
honest debate. I do
take issue with your lead line: "Do liberals outnumber
conservatives in the academy?" Where you answered "Probably," the
answer is a resounding "Yes"—this by your own quoted
statistics. And, "Does it make a difference in how students
are educated?" You answered, "That's debatable," whereas
I would argue there is obvious detrimental outcome—unchecked
liberal bias is harmful to both the individual student's learning
process and to the student-teacher interaction within the educational
environment.
Incorrectly
attributed to Churchill, but sanguine [sic] nonetheless: "If
you're not Liberal when you're twenty-five, you have no heart.
If you're not Conservative when you're thirty-five, you have
no brain."
In my opinion, liberal and secular-progressive beliefs have led
the faculty to teach absent of right and wrong. Faith-based standards
and ethical discussions have deteriorated from the earlier days
of Duke, which started as a Methodist school and was still influenced
during my time in the late 1950s.
I
trust you will follow up this "leaning" article with
report of vigorous debate within the community. This for the
purpose of making Duke an even better leader and example of the "great
American university system."
David Allen Lower '59
Baldwinsville, New York
It is amusing to watch David Horowitz and others suddenly discover
the virtues of affirmative action when it comes to redressing
the under-representation of conservatives among the professoriate.
But at least as amusing, and not noted by Robert Bliwise, is
the hypocrisy of those who claim that the overwhelming predominance
of the left in the academy does not affect the education of students. The
campus left has for years dismissed the notion that neutrality
in the classroom is possible. A professor always teaches from
a particular perspective that derives from his race, class, and
gender. If he pretends to transcend those categories and to treat
ideas objectively, it is probably a sign that the professor is
part of a conspiracy to eliminate difference and maintain the
status quo. This "perspectival" claim has become so
commonplace among university boards and administrators that it
is now the chief justification for affirmative action in the
admission of students and the hiring of faculty.
The difficulty for colleges is clear: If neutrality is impossible,
then how can it not matter that so few conservatives—who certainly
bring a distinctive perspective to the classroom—teach? If affirmative
action is justified by the impossibility of neutrality, then
why not give an advantage to right-wingers? If claims to neutrality
mask a hegemonic project, then whose project is being threatened
by David Horowitz?
John M. Owen IV '85
Charlottesville, Virginia
American research universities may
have the reputation for being "the
best in the world," but this is certainly NOT a result of
the extreme left-of-center bias in most social-science and humanities
departments or among college administrators, as the final quotation
in your article on "leftward leanings" seems to imply.
American universities are held in such high esteem worldwide
despite, rather than because of, the extreme left-liberal bias
in the liberal-arts sector of most American research universities.
If you don't believe this, just ask yourself this: Do you really
think that it is because of people like Fredric Jameson, Stanley
Fish, and Cornel West that institutions like Harvard, Duke, and
Princeton attract so many talented students and researchers from
abroad? Are the Asian, African, South American, and European
students who so eagerly seek to enroll and study in the better
American universities attracted to those institutions primarily
because of their departments of comparative literature, of women's
studies, of Afro-American studies, of cultural anthropology,
of English literature, or of multicultural studies, where left-of-center
professors and their viewpoints completely dominate the scene?
Come
on! The high reputation the American universities enjoy abroad
is due almost entirely to their hard sciences, economics,
engineering, and professional-school sectors where the political
orientation of professors and researchers is less likely to spill
over into their academic work. Defending the left-leaning status
quo in the social science and humanities sectors of American
universities by touting claims that "we're the best in the
world" obscures the very real need for greater viewpoint
diversity in these sectors. Why is it that people on the left
who can see the logic of enhancing viewpoint diversity on college
campuses in their call to hire more people from diverse racial
and ethnic backgrounds suddenly become defensive and try to change
the subject when the issue of ideological diversity is brought
up?
Russell Nieli '70
Princeton, New Jersey
The writer is a lecturer in politics at Princeton University.
Do college professors teach, or do they preach? There is more
than a little evidence that some engage in the latter to a considerable
extent. Students often complain that their professors go off
on political tangents, and some leftist professors proudly trumpet
their commitment to using the classroom as a soapbox for their
desires to change the world.
Lots of parents who are on the rightward side of the political
divide think that's a problem, evidently fearing that leftist
professors, like the Pied Piper of Hamelin, will lead their children
off into Noam Chomsky-land. That might happen occasionally, but
it's not the main reason why I think there is reason to be unhappy
over the politicization of classrooms.
That reason is based on the economic concept of opportunity cost.
Time spent on irrelevant political commentary is time that can't
be devoted to the intended subject matter of the course. Undergraduates
need to learn the fundamentals of the various academic disciplines
they study. Taking time away from teaching English composition,
for instance, in order to harangue students about the evils of
American society may do little to convert them to the professor's
point of view, but it does contribute to the poor writing ability
that is common among recent college graduates.
Former
Duke English professor Stanley Fish was absolutely correct
when he wrote [in The Chronicle of Higher Education] that "teachers
should teach their subjects. They should not teach peace or war
or freedom or obedience or diversity or uniformity or nationalism
or antinationalism or any other agenda that might properly be
taught by a political leader or a talk-show host."
There's the problem. Too many professors want to be talk-show
hosts. That's not what they are paid to do.
George C. Leef J.D. '77
Raleigh, North Carolina
The writer is vice president for research at the John William
Pope Center for Higher Education Policy.
Education and Religion
I commend my classmate Mr. Clutts
for his letter in the September-October issue in which he articulates his Duke concerns.
The motto displayed on the seal of the university is Eruditio
et Religio. During my student days, the seal was commonly placed
on stationery, mugs, pens, and artifacts of all types, whereas
its use is now limited apparently to official documents such
as diplomas and contracts. Perhaps it would have been helpful
to continue its common use to remind us of the motto and goals
of the university—education and religion.
That
this purpose has been lost becomes more apparent to me after
reviewing the article regarding the campus visit of David Horowitz.
Horowitz refers to the list of professors contributing to "the
intellectual corruption of the American university." Ivy
League-ism began at Duke in the late '60s with the appointment
of a president [who graduated from Yale] and continues today,
except for the period during which the university was somewhat
saved or settled by the appointment of Terry Sanford.
I
agree with Professor Harvey Mansfield in criticizing"political
correctness, affirmative action, feminism, and grade inflation." Euphemisms
abound in today's political and academic circles. One shining
example may be "cultural sensitivity" classes, which
seems a term born during the lacrosse discussions. And, after
all, the term "affirmative action" is less shocking
than "affirmative bias" or "preference." Frankly,
ethnic-, minority-, cultural-, racial-, color-, or gender-based
quotas or percentage goals should be considered outdated. In
1954, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education,
stated that the U.S. Constitution is color-blind. Yet all we
have done since is make and maintain records based on color.
I hope we would all agree that bad taste, which is the principal
concern of Mr. Clutts' letter, should be avoided. Upon graduation
from Duke, my father received a Holy Bible and a copy of The
Duke Endowment [indenture]. The Holy Bible was given to each
graduate in 1961. James B. Duke was a man of great foresight
and purpose, and I recommend a re-reading of The Duke Endowment
[indenture]. After all, his vision makes this discussion possible.
Gene Price '61
Winston-Salem,
North Carolina
Phil Clutts '61 wrote: "I was required to take religion
courses at Duke, presumably to make me a better person." These
required courses gave me an intellectual understanding of religions.
While I am a physical scientist who was, and still is, involved
in research, that one year of religion at Duke held me in good
stead for all time—allowing me to understand the origins of
events even to the present day. The professor explained that "the
Bible was history rewritten for a purpose."
Weston Haskell '54
Fulshear, Texas
Full-Service Issue
September-October
was an outstanding issue. I usually thumb through
the magazine, read one or two articles, and check my class
notes. This month I found several articles that I read in their
entirety ("J-Pop Goes the Market," "The Governor's
Axe," "Leftward Leanings," etc.). I even found
an idea for my son's seventh-grade science project in the Gazette
section.
I'm looking forward to next month's issue.
David Reasner '82
Marlborough, Massachusetts
On Arduin
As
an Independent who feels that neither party represents the
entirety of my views, I'd have more respect for Donna Arduin
["The Governor's Axe," September-October
2006] if
she stayed in one place for a while. If she truly "joined
government to shrink it," would it not make sense to remain
with one state through a couple of economic cycles to prove
that her approach brings results for the long term? Instead,
after marching through the state budgets for several different
states, like Sherman marching to the sea, it seems she has
left government to form a private firm. From a brief look at
the website of Arduin, Laffer & Moore, it looks like her
firm intends to profit quite handsomely from a government that
governs a lot more than less.
While I have no problem with her doing well for herself, I do
have a problem with people cloaking themselves in virtuous cloth
of their own making. If she were to continue in government, would
she discontinue the kinds of summer internships in which she
participated? If private-sector spending is better than public
sector, why is she now presenting a study on the benefits of
the state of Florida's funding a new medical school? If the market
determines more doctors are needed, will the market not make
training available? Would it not be better to keep that tax money
in the hands of citizens?
I
agree in principle with such fiscal conservative standards
as "welfare to work." Yet Ms. Arduin's response when
coming face to face with a homeless person was a dismissive "get
a job." It sounds to me like someone who is more comfortable
with easy bromides than messy details. Like I said, I'd have
more admiration if she stayed around long enough to triage the
axe jobs she initiated.
Matthew J. Schott '76
Needham, Massachusetts
Lacrosse Redux
Yes, Sally Johnson Fogerty's
letter [September-October 2006] corrects many misconceptions re the Duke lacrosse incident. Her
son's Duke lacrosse team represented Duke well. How unfortunate
that they "briefly let two strangers into their lives," although
I thought they intentionally hired these two women strippers.
And of course, such hiring is not an act of "lack of respect" (per
Fogerty), but rather almost a statement of how highly these lacrosse
males thought of these two women and the services they performed.
Maybe Ms. Johnson would have liked her Duke daughter to have
been offered such a show of respect during her time at Duke as
well.
Barry Smith, Duke parent '04
Los Altos Hills, California
I was both amazed and dismayed at
the cowardly editing of George Jennison's wonderful lacrosse
parent letter. When I read the long version you called our
attention to on the Web, I discovered a totally made-up concluding
sentence had been published in place of Jennison's concluding
three sentences that was a far cry from a paraphrase. It totally
changed the meaning of his critical concluding point. You as
editors should be ashamed of engaging in the same "politically correct expediency" that
the letter following Jennison's so accurately paints as the
administration response. Please print Jennison's concluding
paragraph in your next issue, in full, along with your editorializing
PC homily, for all to see. And let's begin the debate in your
pages that Jennison suggests is the next step—why the university
has been so silent and abandoned these students.
Steve Hoffman '77
Stamford, Connecticut
Editor's note: Because of space constraints, Mr. Jennison was
asked to shorten his original letter. He approved the version
that appeared in the magazine and added the concluding sentence
himself. The original, longer letter remains posted on the Web.
The treatment of the Duke lacrosse
coach and players by President Richard Brodhead et alia deserves
the scorn of all men interested in justice. For me, it was
no surprise. I've watched Duke administrators for three generations
condemn Duke students first and avoid facts thereafter. Have
they disavowed "innocent until proven guilty"?
Are they simply the dregs of carpetbaggers? I have yet to hear
of them upholding any students until the facts are in.
Other schools and their presidents have shown far greater sense
in refusing to throw their students to the wolves. Recently,
the president of a university embarrassed by a fraternity party
acting out a blackface theme refused to appease the mob. He said
that it was an off-campus affair and left it up to the frat's
national office to take care of the matter—as they did promptly.
The
Duke lacrosse party was likewise off-campus, but President
Brodhead was eager to show how non-racist and politically correct
he is. The only error the lacrosse team made, and it is a serious
one, was in having a stripper at their party. Surely not a "hanging
offense."
The Forum discussion in the September-October issue of Duke Magazine
was excellent. Brodhead is exposed by these parents as
even more gutless than I knew, because they complain that he
did not let the lacrosse parents know that he was
hanging their sons out to dry.
Hereafter, the
entrance to Duke University should bear a sign warning "All
who enter here...."
Florence Mitchell Rand '40
Silver Spring, Maryland
Art Controversy
Laura
Pomerantz, please let me answer your questions ["Paradoxical
Art," September-October 2006].
(1) Americans should demand that our government put those terrorists
who tried to kill us (and did kill 3,000 of us) and are still
trying to do so in prison and keep them there.
(2)
Our democracy stands for your right to say any ridiculous
thing you wish about it (as you did in your "art")
without being put in prison, which, of course, you would be if
you were to say such things about Castro in Cuba!
Pamela Gill '67
Charlotte, North Carolina
Health Courts' Appeal
I hope that Professor Neil Vidmar's quote regarding special health
courts [Quad Quotes, September-October 2006] was taken out
of context. While a health court could be constructed to disallow
appeal, the idea itself deserves much more than perfunctory
dismissal. Further, special health courts have a precedent
in the federal tax courts, where cases are heard by experts
in tax law and do in fact allow appeal. People do have a right
to careful and competent medical care, as well as longer-than-sound-bite
information about how to achieve that. For an in-depth and
careful analysis, see cgood.org/society-reading-cgpubsbinders-2.html.
Douwe Rienstra '65,
M.D. '69
Port Townsend, Washington
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