|
WHAT LUCK?
I loved reading Luck of the Draw (September/October)
and am saddened at the loss of the actual Draw. Being
assigned a random computer number is no fun, and not at all in the
Stanford spirit.
When I lamely avoided all the hoopla and drama of Draw groups freshman
year, I formed a Draw group of two with a guy friend who was also
opting out of the scene of picking seven best friends
for his Draw group. I felt lucky, so I drew our number. Of the 3,000
numbers allocated to guaranteed students under that
old system, I drew 2,319. Ill never forget that awful number;
I even endured it as a nickname for a while. I was the last female
to be assigned to Hurlburt on the Row, now Slav Dom.
When my one-room double (shared with a random transfer student who
turned out to be a ton of fun) caught fire at the end of first quarter,
right before finals, I was jokingly tagged as the ultimate resister
who had tried to torch my room in order to be placed in better housing.
Obviously, it was not arson. (Warning: electric blankets are dangerous.)
But the year was awesome in spite of where I lived, because I was
at Stanford.
Pilar Keagy Johnson, 89, JD 94
Atlanta, Georgia
HARD TO LEAVE
I taught for a semester at a private school and loved it (Why
Teach? September/ October). But private schools pay even
less than public schools, especially since I still dont have
a credential, and the cost of living in Silicon Valley is even higher
now than when I was teaching. Now Im back in software engineering.
Its hard to leave a high-paying engineering job and take a
year off to get a teaching credential when, as a teacher, Ill
end up earning less than half my current salary.
Darin McGrew, 85
Sunnyvale, California
PRAIRIE ROOTS
I was amazed and delighted on opening the new issue to see that
beautiful spread of pictures of my husbands home country (On
the Edge of Nowhere, September/ October). The illustrations
are exceptional, and in the text, Mr. Foley caught and expressed
the love my husband had for that prairie country. The quotes he
chose from Wolf Willow are some of the most beautiful and
evocative prose my husband ever wrote.
Mary Stegner
Los Altos Hills, California
I was delighted to see Jim Foleys article on the current state
of Wallace Stegners boyhood home in Eastend, Saskatchewan,
with its testimony to the continuing value of Stegners writing
to younger generations of Western authors. I wondered if something
fell to the cutting-room floor, though, when I read that Wolf
Willowcorrectly characterized elsewhere in the article
by its subtitle, A History, a Story, and a Memory of the Last
Plains Frontieris a semiautobiographical novel.
The autobiographical novel (nothing semi about it) is The Big
Rock Candy Mountain.
In any case, both of these books are still well worth rereading
as we contemplate our history as Americans in the West
and try to figure out how to live in harmony with our neighbors
and our environment.
Suzanne Ferguson, PhD 67
Distinguished Visiting Honors
Professor (Humanities)
University of Central Florida
Orlando, Florida
If Jim Foley had read The Big Rock Candy MountainStegners
most autobiographical novel, and his best, in my opinionhe
wouldnt have written, His family came to Eastend from
Iowa by stagecoach in 1914. And the article might have had
more feeling and depth.
Hazel K. McCuen, MA 29
Bakersfield, California
Editors note: According to Jackson J. Benson, 52,
author of Wallace Stegner: His Life and Work (Viking Penguin,
1996), Stegner arrived in Eastend by horse and wagon in 1914, at
age 5, in the company of his mother and older brother. They had
come from Iowa, where his maternal grandfather had a farm. His father
was already in Eastend trying to get established. Decades later,
Stegner said that both Wolf Willow and The Big Rock Candy
Mountain mixed autobiography with fiction (although Wolf
Willow is not a novel but a collection of writings inspired
by Eastend). Of the lesser-known work, Stegner once said, It
was a book as personal to me as The Big Rock Candy Mountain.
IN PRAISE OF 'DUST'
My eye caught Professor Felstiners wonderful essay on Elizabeth
Wiltsees honors thesis on Samuel Beckett (this
dust of words, September/October). I could not put it
down until the last word.
May STANFORD have more such articles.
Stephen Horn, 53, PhD 58
Washington, D.C.
BLENDED MAJORS
As the product of an interdisciplinary programinternational
relationsI appreciated your article on IDPs (Farm
Report, September/October). After graduation, I too found that
my majora unique blend of political science, history, economics
and languagesrequired some explanation. The inevitable question
would follow: so what do you do with that?
In the wake of the horrific attacks on New York and Washington,
the answer is clear: it helps me understand what is happening in
the world. I can hold educated debates about global terrorism and
the emerging American response to it. I can explain why Iran is
important and how the Arab-Israeli conflict will be affected. More
fundamentally, it comforts me to understand the actors on the world
stage, the concerns they are weighing, the tools they are using
and the threats we are all facing.
I owe this to my professors and to the vibrant IDP of which I was
a part. To grapple with a crisis of this magnitude, it is not enough
to understand history, economics or political theory alone. Their
synthesis, however, produces a powerful result.
Cody Harris, 00
Washington, D.C.
As one parent of Heather Pon-Barry, who was quoted in your IDP article,
I write to point out that it is due to our being more thoughtful
and reflective that it takes Heather longer to explain sym
sys to us than to her classmates. No one need infer that we are
not as bright! No, sir!
Jack Barry
San Francisco, California
IDPs are indeed an important part of Stanfords academic landscape.
I write to point out one omission in your list: the earth systems
program, housed in the School of Earth Sciences. Our majors numbered
127 at graduation last June, when we conferred 25 BS and 15 MS degrees.
We began the 2001-02 academic year with 102 undergraduate and coterminal
masters students.
Julie A. Kennedy, PhD 92
Senior Lecturer and Associate Director
Earth Sciences Program
Stanford, California
GUARDING AN ANGEL
"Restored to Glory (Farm
Report, September/October) warms the hearts of those of us who
remember the sorry mutilation of the Angel of Grief statue. However,
the article omits any reference to protecting the rest of the cemetery
from future vandalism. This is why she is grieving.
Recalling the wild parties with which Stanford students celebrate
Halloween at the Mausoleum, I suggested that a fence be put around
the whole cemetery area to protect it from vandalism. A Stanford
student (one of the best and brightest) wrote to the Stanford
Daily ridiculing the proposal and inviting me to share a keg
of beer with him there. Since I declined, he will probably drink
that keg all by himself.
Better build that fence quicklybefore October 31.
Ronald Hilton
Professor Emeritus, Romance Languages
Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution
Stanford, California
LOADED WORDS
I think the Asian bitches graffiti (Letters,
September/October; Farm Report, July/ August) is some kind of hoax,
because while Ive heard white bigots say all kinds of horrible
things, I have never heard a white person say, Rape all Asian
bitches and dump them or anything even remotely resembling
those words or their syntax.
Tom Hwang, 76
Columbia, Maryland
|
I take strong exception to Dr. Laura Leets when
she opines that the campus graffiti is free speech protected by
the First Amendment. There are two recent cases handed down by the
California appellate courts that make it very clear that writing
Rape all Asian bitches and dump them on classroom walls
is at the very least an act of vandalism and at worst a hate
crime under state law.
Furthermore, a hate crime does not have to amount to a firebombing
or beating someone up, as Professor Leets asserts. I
only hope that the University and any of its students who feel threatened
report such incidents to the authorities. There is an effort by
law enforcement throughout the state to track hate crimes. I would
suggest that Professor Leets consult the Santa Clara district attorneys
office for information about exactly what crimes were committed.
Greg Jacobs, 70
Sebastopol, California
Leets responds: Mr. Jacobs raises an important
question of distinguishing where free speech ends and a hate crime
begins. First Amendment dogma maintains that speech may not be penalized
merely because its content is racist, sexist or offensive. The content
of the hate graffiti was protected, but if someone was arrested
for it, they could be charged with vandalism. Moreover, I certainly
agree that there are times when words may cause a reasonable person
to feel threatened. In that case, a person is not punished for his
or her beliefs but for speech deemed equivalent of conduct, such
as advocating rape or violence. It requires judgment and experience
to determine whether speech may constitute a criminal threat. Fact
patterns are not always clear, and reasonable discretion and reasoned
judgment are crucial in determining whether a hate crime, giving
rise to civil or criminal liability, has occurred. There were other
mediating factors that prevented Stanfords case from resulting
in a criminal offense (e.g., not directed at a specific person).
I can assure Mr. Jacobs that the Stanford community takes all acts
of intolerance very seriously and has adopted a protocol to
maximize the reporting of such occurrences.
BEYOND THE SOUP KITCHEN
James Hamilton (Letters,
September/ October) criticizes Dean Scotty McLennan (Cut
from a Different Cloth, July/ August) for advancing a liberal-radical
love of government in his analysis of students religious views.
While I do not accept some of McLennans liberal statements
about religion, he is right on target about the alienation of service
from politics. Whether conservative, liberal, radical or reactionary,
each of us has a responsibility to understand the social and
institutional conditions in which we live. We cannot skip
through the daisies of community service without recognizing how
politics and economics make the meadow possible. The student who
says, I dont like politics may not want to seek
office, but by ignoring the auguries of her political and social
surroundings she defies them not a whit.
To think that any concern for social forces beyond the walls of
a soup kitchen is a call for government bureaucracy
is to immobilize the very community spirit and duty Hamilton invokes
as Christs legacy. Such an ideological straitjacket not only
discourages a challenge, whether governmental or not, to wide-scale
oppression, but also legitimizes a confinement of ones
reach, as Hamilton puts it, to a group of folks small enough
to soothe, not rattle, the conscience. Christ, though, was not afraid
to clash with political, social and ethnic arrangements in Israel;
nor, in doing so, did he trust prevailing estimations of who was
within reach as a neighbor (see the parable of the Good Samaritan).
And, while government is no panacea for social ills, I wonder what
present-day Christians would say to Matthew 25 echoes like these:
I was starving, and you fought to abolish AFDC; I was working
to feed my family, and you shrugged at standards for a safe workplace.
Perhaps an ideologue assured of the irrelevance of politics and
the incompetence of bureaucracy would reply with uptilted chin,
Well, that would have been government. But given the
complex history of our political and social institutions
churches, of course, includedI believe for now that answer
falls short of loving God with all of ones mind.
Thomas Arnold, 94
Cambridge, Massachusetts
RESEARCH FRONTIER
Ronald Levys cancer research (Made
to Order, July/August) is pushing back a frontier that
I was first aware of when, in the early 1950s, I knew Dr. Harvey
B. Stone, a graduate of Johns Hopkins Medical Schools Class
of 1906. Dr. Stone was a general surgeon of that era who was greatly
concerned about the problem of cancer in general and breast cancer
in particular. In his first published paper (1908), he discussed
the theoretical possibility of two basic causes, one being parasitic
and the other being cell autonomy, in which cancer might be regarded
as a growth related to fundamental changes in the cells themselves.
A later paper of his was titled, Can Resistance to Cancer
Be Induced?
Dr. Stone worked principally with mice, placing killed cancer cells
back into a host mouse. Also included in his research were several
women, in whom he replanted their own killed tumor cells. His premise
was that tumors might be of viral or other protein origin, and if
so, patients might develop antibodies to their own cancers, thus
improving their chances of survival and resistance to malignant
disease.
The work of Drs. Stone and Levy exemplifies the challenges inherent
in the profession of medicine. There are many unanswered questions,
the solutions to which will yield huge dividends, thus allowing
researchers to move on to other unsolved problems.
Gaylord Lee Clark, 53
Baltimore, Maryland
DIFFERENT PATHS
I enjoyed Kevin Cools column, Whats a Guy Supposed
to Do? (First Impressions,
July/August). To one old fart still making choices one week at a
time, his theme resonates strongly. Im sure others of my generation
have discovered that there are many mountains to climb as well as
different paths up each one (Scotty McLennans wonderful religious
metaphor). Were all trying to figure it out, to make
sense and be useful to others. Lets have less in the
way of overly familiar success stories and more in the
way of quests that stretch the envelope.
Roger Coates, MBA 69
Charlotte, North Carolina
SERVING HER NATION
I am a biology teacher for the Navajo and Hopi nations in Tuba City,
Ariz., and have seen Karletta Chiefs presentations on several
occasions during her term as Miss Navajo Nation (Snapshot,
May/June). As far back as I can recall, she may be the first
woman to hold that title with two degrees, and she is certainly
the first from Stanford. What a role model she has been for the
younger generation of Navajos and other Native Americans. Many of
the students dont even know about Stanford, so she has given
the Universityas well as her peoplea lot of positive
PR.
Willie LongReed, 78, MA 85
Tuba City, Arizona
'GIVE HIM HIS DUE'
It was with sadness that I read Denni Woodwards letter
(July/August) questioning Timm Williamss dedication to
Native American values. I first met Timm (a.k.a. Prince Lightfoot)
while taking the field with the rest of the Stanford football team
at the Stadium. I met him a second time in 1975 while working with
a trail crew in the Redwood National Park. For a few years afterward,
I was the caretaker at his familys fishing camp on the Klamath
River, where I spent many hours with Timm discussing his role as
Prince Lightfoot and his profound reverence for his Yurok traditions.
I know firsthand that Timm saw this role as the only vehicle available
to him to put forth his views on the plight of Native American peoples
during a time when the dominant society was pushing all Native Americans
to the back pages of history. He was agonizingly aware of the suffering
of Native Americans in the 1950s and 60s, and he worked for
the betterment of not only his fellow Yuroks, but all Indian people.
Timm fully understood that his costume was not traditional, and
he did not consider his dance to be a religious ceremony. The costume
was the means by which his words could reach the dominant society.
It was his off-field words, made possible by his on-field performance,
that justified his actions.
I knew him. His heart was right. He remains my friend, despite his
death. He honored his family and his people. Give him his due. Let
him rest in peace.
Joel McDonough, 69
Myers Flat, California
CORRECTIONS
The father of Damien Hall (The
Karmic Capitalism of Chip Conley, September/ October)
was brought to the hospital where Hall works, but not by police.
The article on the death of Jack Elway (Farm
Report, July/August) states that when Elway coached the Cardinal
into the 1986 Gator Bowl against Clemson, it was Stanfords
first bowl appearance in 15 years. In fact, Stanford beat Michigan
in the 72 Rose Bowl and, during Bill Walshs first two
years as coach, beat LSU in the 77 Sun Bowl and beat Georgia
in the 78 Bluebonnet Bowl.
|