Sick of it
I'm digging out of having had a pretty bad weekend. The sinus and bronchial stuff always gets me this time of year. I get sick with it and then I get sick of it.
Rush Limbaugh has his . . . well, here is mine. This is my record of news stories and issues that interest me. You can also find more headlines at the site where I serve as editor: The Common Voice.
I'm digging out of having had a pretty bad weekend. The sinus and bronchial stuff always gets me this time of year. I get sick with it and then I get sick of it.
An Invitation from the Editor
The Common Voice - PDA Version
As Palm Sunday and the Easter season approaches, Pastor Chuck turns our attention to the cross. The morning service focused on the work of Christ on the cross and the true meaning of the Passion. Sunday evening, he took us to the Old Testament, showed how the Day of Atonement pointed to the Cross and then pointed out what it means to us today.
Cyclones unable to stop May, Williams
Well, the finish was pretty incredible even if only Biffle gave me a decent finish (except for Waltrip - who I now wish I had not put on the bench for this race).
ESPN.com - NCB/NCAATOURNEY05 - NCB Bracket
First, basketball...
ESPN.com - NCB/NCAATOURNEY05 - NCB Bracket
ESPN.com - Men's College Basketball - Scoreboard
ESPN.com - NCB/NCAATOURNEY05 - NCB Bracket
ESPN.com - Men's College Basketball - Scoreboard
At Stake Is Academic Freedom
At our last meeting devoted to discussion of this issue, one speaker glossed the term "provocative," used several times by President Summers in his offending comments at the NBER. She contended that the term was in fact quite sinister because to provoke is to provoke conflict, sometimes even violent conflict, and we certainly don't want that in the university "community." I, to the contrary, think that a provocative speech in the academy is intended to provoke thought and reasoned argument.For the most part, I agree with Mr. Thernstrom. If the "creed" of an institution of higher learning is academic freedom, then the faculty should be consistent. However, not every institution chooses to make that its creed. Are they then any less of an academic institution?
Equally questionable, in my view, are the repeated references that faculty members have made to the Harvard "community," which are intended to suggest that President Summers had given voice to outrageous ideas violating the norms of the community. Is Harvard University really a "community" that requires ideological conformity? The First Baptist Church of Peoria is a community in that sense, with a common conception of God and how best to worship Him. Possibly Bob Jones University is a community. But no great university can long remain great if it attempts to enforce the equivalent of a religious creed on its members. What really holds the members of the Harvard "community" together is much more limited. It is simply a common commitment to pursue the truth through disciplined scholarship, and a faith that freedom of inquiry is the best means to arrive at the truth. I find the "provocative" remarks made by President Summers entirely consistent with that community norm.
I do have to admit that it is somewhat difficult to defend the academic freedom of a man who seems to have surrendered it again and again, in his ever more abject apologies for his NBER remarks. Nevertheless, President Summers is not the sole owner of the right of academic freedom, and he thus cannot surrender it for all of us.
The Common Voice Directory
Cult News.com: RFK Jr. praises "cult" for its "good values," but bashes Bush as borderline fascist
Religious Colleges Coming of Age
A wry picture of America then and now
Arkansas News Bureau - Is Asa running for governor?
Giant Faith
UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400
UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400
WeeklyDig : > THE MORMON FACTOR
Here are Sunday's Sermons from March 6.
Lake Central helps equip Kosovo youths
The State | 03/03/2005 | Today in History
THM: Marvin Williams, Mama's Boy :: Marvin Williams is entirely normal. Which makes him entirely remarkable.
Jay Nordlinger on National Review Online
In The New Yorker, I spotted the snottiest little piece to come down the pike since . . . the last time I read The New Yorker. It is about some West Point cadets, who were taken to the Metropolitan Opera to see Turandot. Civilize 'em, you know - make 'em less beastly, less embarrassing to their fellow Americans who work for or read The New Yorker.Well, with all of this in mind, I plan to spend my day with Tony Walker, a reporter with the Australian Financial Review. I can't help but wonder what it real motive might be... I don't like to be cynical... Maybe it is just the funk.
(By the way, when you say "Turandot," go ahead and pronounce the final "t." Many don't, in the mistaken belief that French is in order. Turandot is an Italian opera about a Chinese princess. Pronounce the "t" - if you can stand to be corrected incorrectly. I would bet most of the tea in Turandot's China that the author of this snotty little article pronounces the name incorrectly.)
Let me cite the last line of the article: "Ernest Lee [a cadet], descending to the coat check, declared his intention to develop his newfound taste for Puccini at the first opportunity. 'I want to get the soundtrack,' he said."
Ha, ha, ha - dumb soldier said "soundtrack," as though the opera were a movie. Journalists have extraordinary power, for good or ill. I think about this a lot. By some artful arranging of sentences and so on, you can make anyone - even an Einstein - look stupid. I hope I don't do it (too often).
Condi's Growing Fan Club