THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1988 G DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1988 G DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1988 g DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 84, NO. 38 Trinity hiring policy targets junior faculty By MAH SCLAFANf As a result ofa change in hiring policy, Trinity College of Arts and Sciences is now placing a greater emphasis on recruiting junior professors rather than "star faculty" as has been the focus in recent years, according to Dean of Trinity College Richard White. The new hiring guidelines will re-establish the "traditional policy" of hiring more assistant and asso­ ciate professors, White said last week. The policy went into effect during last year's recruit­ ment process, he said. Approximately 28 out of 30 faculty hired last year were on the assistant or associate professor levels. Each of the past several years, White has he asked departments to submit names of distinguished profes­ sors, or "targets of opportunity," whom they would rec­ ommend for hiring by the University. Trinity College would then make serious efforts to recruit the named professors, partly by offering competitive salaries, he said. The former policy was intended to bring about a "major and rapid" change in the number of distinguished professors at Trinity, White said. The presence of distin­ guished professors, whom White called "magnet faculty," helps in recruiting highly qualified junior facul­ ty, he said. Having concentrated on hiring magnet JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE faculty in the past few years, "we are in a better competi­ tive league for associate and assistant professors," White Under cover said. These sheep are on special assignment at the State Fair in Raleigh, so we can't show their faces. But word has it they're tracking a big shipment of grass into the country. Baaaaaad. See FACULTY on page 4 j>- Cardiology research center Students assist rural residents to utilize engineering library By JENNIFER DOUGLAS Rather than escape to the beach or By SCOTT GELIN January for a projected completion date of the mountains, 18 dedicated students Construction on a new facility to im­ June 2, 1989, said Ron Blickhan, director spent fall break working just as hard prove cardiovascular technology is sched­ of facilities planning and management. as they do during classtime. Their trip uled to begin late this year on the fourth Other participants in the project in­ to rural North Carolina to renovate an floor of the Nello Teer Engineering Li­ clude the University of North Carolina at old potato storage building into a medi­ brary. Chapel Hill, the Research Triangle Insti­ cal and senior center proved to be a dif­ The new laboratory, formally called the tute, the Microelectronics Center of North ferent sort of classroom. Duke-North Carolina National Science Carolina, and the North Carolina Biotech­ The program in Tillery, a town of Foundation Engineering Research Center nology Center. 800 about two hours from Durham for Emerging Cardiovascular Technology "We are the lead institution, the host," near Rocky Mount, is a project of the (ERC), will be supported financially by said Len Pardue, associate vice president North Carolina Student Rural Health various grants totalling approximately and director of University relations. Coalition. Founded in 1978 by students $15 to $20 million. "It will certainly be a Research at the new facility will focus from several universities in the state, great boon to our school," said Earl primarily on cardiovascular research the Coalition works to develop com­ Dowell, dean of the School of Engineering. from an engineering aspect. Research will munity-run institutions to improve BRENDEN KOOTSEY/THE CHRONICLE The construction, which will cost be divided into two main areas: diagnosis health conditions in poverty-stricken $900,000, is scheduled to begin in the last and therapy. Specifically, researchers will towns. health care,according to Engineering week of December or the first week of See LIBRARY on page 11 • The Coalition recruits doctors, nur­ junior Curt Jennewine, who helped or­ ses and interns from different univer­ ganize the trip. "They just use tents, sities who volunteer their time to and especially with OB-GYEN patients, various health clinics. The organiza­ more privacy is needed." tion also recruits undergraduates as About 80 percent of Tillery's resi­ volunteers. dents are senior citizens living on so­ The project, originally undertaken cial security benefits. Many families by students, during fall break last are headed by teen parents or are on year, involves building a desperately welfare, Jennewine said. needed medical center in Tillery. Cur­ The Duke student group made sig­ rently the doctors closest to the town nificant headway working on the the are 20 miles away. "Right now there new health clinic, dubbed the "Potato really isn't any solid structure" for See TILLERY on page 7 • Inside Weather Blackburn honored: What do Scattered ShOWerS: For Dodgers Reynolds Price and William Styron fans, tomorrow will be warm and sun­ have in common, besides being Duke ny. But for A's fans it will rain, hail alumni and famous novelists? To find and storm. For those who really don't STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE out, see page 3. care, i'll be partly cloudy, highs in the 60s and lows near 40. The Nello Teer Engineering Library THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20,1988 World & National Newsfile Two planes crash in India; 164 believed dead Associated Press Vayudoot hit the side of a hill in eastern allegedly failing to maintain pre-flight Palestinians killed: Two Pales­ India during a severe rainstorm, and all safety procedures. tinians were reported killed and 10 AHMADABAD, India — A Boeing 737 34 people aboard were feared dead, offi­ The cause of Wednesday's crash was wounded Wednesday as a general jetliner and another Indian passenger cials said. not immediately known, but one airline strike to protest Jewish settlements plane crashed in bad weather within two Indian Airlines Flight 131 was flying official who spoke on condition of anonym­ shut the occupied West Bank and Gaza hours of each other Wednesday, and au­ from Bombay with 129 passengers and six ity said the airline suspects a technical Strip. thorities said the death toll may be as crewmembers when it crashed at 7:40 malfunction complicated by bad weather. high as 164. a.m. Wednesday (10:10 p.m. EDT Tues­ The Indian Airlines jet was trying to day) on its final approach to Ahmadabad A recording between the pilot and the Israelis killed in Lebanon: A land in heavy fog at the western city of airport, about 500 miles southwest of New Ahmadabad control tower gave no indica­ suicide car bomb exploded Wednesday Ahmadabad when it slammed into a tree, Delhi. tion of trouble. Rescue workers found the near Israel's "Good Fence" border hit a power line and crashed. All but five Federal Aviation Minister Shiv Raj flight data and cockpit voice recorders in crossing in south Lebanon, killing of the 135 people aboard were killed, and Patil said the death toll of 130 was the smoldering wreckage and blood-stained seven Israeli soldiers and wounding three of the survivors were in serious worst in the carrier's 26-year history. It debris. eight others and two Lebanese civil­ condition with burns and broken bones. was the airline's 16th major accident. Survivor Paag Vasavda, 28, said the ians, the military command said. About VA hours later, a 30-year-old The government-run airline, which flies pilot told passengers he was having trou­ Fokker Friendship propeller plane leased to 73 airports in India and to nine other ble landing in the fog. Vasavda said he Iron may cause cancer: iron by Indian Airlines to the domestic countries, has come under fire recently for heard two explosions. pills may be unhealthy for people who don't have anemia because of the possi­ bility that excessive iron increases the risk of cancer, a new study concludes. FDA announces new drug approval policy The plan calls for the agency to work human testing. Contractor Suspended: The Pen­ more closely with drug developers to more But if any drugs now in early trials tagon on Wednesday suspended the WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug clearly focus early research on a drug so show effectiveness, they will be approved Sundstrand Corp. from doing business Administration Wednesday announced that it produces more information to be for wide commercial distribution far ear­ with the government, saying it wasn't new drug approval procedures intended to evaluated, Young said. lier than generally allowed under the old satisfied with the company's response make new treatments available more With more early data, and taking into system. to being caught up in a huge defense quickly to people with such life-threat­ account the risks of a potential treatment fraud case. ening diseases as AIDS or cancer. vs. its possible benefits, the agency can The effort to change the regulations The FDA commissioner, Dr. Frank speed the approval process for agents was touched off by complaints by advo­ FAA Checks 737S: The Federal Young, said the procedures could reduce aimed at life-threatening or severely de­ cacy groups for people with AIDS that the Aviation Administration said Wednes­ the time it takes to clear promising drugs bilitating diseases, he said. process was delaying possible treatments day it was speeding up an order for by a third to a half, cutting years off the for critically ill patients. more thorough inspections of aging average of eight years for approval. Health officials cautioned that the Specifically, the commissioner said, the Boeing 737 jetliners after a row of "I believe the new plan will help insure changed testing process would not neces­ plan was developed in response to a re­ cracks, including one a foot long, was that some key drugs and biologies go sarily produce a cascade of new drugs for quest in August by the President's Task found on a Continental Airlines plane.
Recommended publications
  • NCAA Division I Baseball Records
    Division I Baseball Records Individual Records .................................................................. 2 Individual Leaders .................................................................. 4 Annual Individual Champions .......................................... 14 Team Records ........................................................................... 22 Team Leaders ............................................................................ 24 Annual Team Champions .................................................... 32 All-Time Winningest Teams ................................................ 38 Collegiate Baseball Division I Final Polls ....................... 42 Baseball America Division I Final Polls ........................... 45 USA Today Baseball Weekly/ESPN/ American Baseball Coaches Association Division I Final Polls ............................................................ 46 National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Division I Final Polls ............................................................ 48 Statistical Trends ...................................................................... 49 No-Hitters and Perfect Games by Year .......................... 50 2 NCAA BASEBALL DIVISION I RECORDS THROUGH 2011 Official NCAA Division I baseball records began Season Career with the 1957 season and are based on informa- 39—Jason Krizan, Dallas Baptist, 2011 (62 games) 346—Jeff Ledbetter, Florida St., 1979-82 (262 games) tion submitted to the NCAA statistics service by Career RUNS BATTED IN PER GAME institutions
    [Show full text]
  • MY PASSAGES Traces the Path of Gail Sheehy's Life, I
    DARING: My Passages By Gail Sheehy Discussion Questions: 1. While DARING: MY PASSAGES traces the path of Gail Sheehy’s life, it also is a fascinating insider’s account of the ways in which journalism has evolved from the 1960s to the present day. How different is the media world today from the world she describes? What changes have come about for the better? Has anything gotten worse? If you were a journalist and could pick any decade to “fall into” career-wise, which one would you choose? What stories or moments in history would you most like to cover (or have covered)? 2. As a journalist, Gail Sheehy was —and still is — fearless. “Why couldn’t a woman write about the worlds that men wrote about?” she asked herself early on and throughout her career. Do you think you would’ve had the guts to be a female reporter during a time when journalism was dominated by men? What qualities do you think she and other pioneers like Gloria Steinem possess that enabled them to court long-standing success despite the risks involved? 3. Though Sheehy enjoyed a short first marriage and a long-standing on-again, off- again relationship with visionary journalist Clay Felker that later culminated in marriage, she was a single mother and thriving career woman for much of her adult life. Throughout DARING: MY PASSAGES, she writes about her attempts to balance motherhood with a successful career. What do you make of the way she approached this struggle? How are the challenges she faced then different from those working mothers face in today’s society? If you were in Sheehy’s shoes, do you think you would have juggled career and motherhood as she did, or would you have given up one for the other? 4.
    [Show full text]
  • BSB Record Book March 2021.Pdf
    1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 3 Quick Facts Pages 4-5 Doak Field Pages 6-10 All-Americans & Honors Pages 11-15 Postseason History Pages 16-17 Head Coaching Records Pages 18-43 Year-By-Year Pages 44-45 Series Records Pages 46-51 Program Records Pages 52-55 #Pack9 Pros Pages 56-61 Letterwinners 2 2021 NC STATE BASEBALL UNIVERSITY INFORMATION COACHING STAFF Location Raleigh, N.C. HEAD COACH ELLIOTT AVENT Founded 1887 Alma Mater VCU ‘83 Enrollment 33,755 Record at NC State 889-531 (24 seasons) Nickname Wolfpack Career Record 1,113-744 (32 seasons) Colors Red (PMS-186) and White ASSISTANT COACHES Conference Atlantic Coast Conference Chris Hart 17th season (Florida St. ‘03) Chancellor Dr. Randy Woodson Clint Chrysler 3rd season (Daytona State College ‘94) Athletics Director Boo Corrigan Joey Holcomb 2nd season (Huntington, ‘06) First Year of Program 1903 FRONT OFFICE Director of Operations Michael Salamino (Michigan, 2012) BALLPARK Administrative Assistant Haley Walker (NC State, 2014) Home Field Doak Field at Dail Park CONACT INFORMATION Location 1050 Varsity Drive, Raleigh, NC Baseball Office Phone Number (919) 515-3613 Year Opened 1966 (renovated in 2003) Baseball Office Fax Number (919) 513-7634 Capacity 3048 Baseball Office E-Mail Address [email protected] Dimensions (LF-LC-CF-RC-RF) 325-370-400-370-330 Baseball Office Mailing Address Box 8505, Raleigh, NC 27695 NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY ATHLETICS COMMUNICATIONS NCAA Tournament Appearances 31 Baseball Contact Lizzie Hattrich NCAA Super Regional Appearances 4 Phone Number (919) 746-8821
    [Show full text]
  • Spider Baseball Record Book
    SPIDER BASEBALL RECORD BOOK COACHING RECORDS TEAM RECORDS Year Record Coach Year Record Coach Single Season Records 1915 5-4 Frank Dobson 1986 24-31 Ron Atkins 1916 10-6 Frank Dobson 1987 21-25 Ron Atkins Games Played 1917 10-1 Frank Dobson 1988 26-33 Ron Atkins 1918 8-5 Frank Dobson 1989 23-24 Ron Atkins 2002 ...................................................................... 66 1919 4-9 Frank Dobson 1990 27-19-1 Ron Atkins 1920 7-4 Frank Dobson 1991 31-20 Ron Atkins Winning Percentage 1921 5-9 Frank Dobson 1992 32-17 Ron Atkins 1930 ....................................................... (12-1) .923 1922 9-7 Frank Dobson 1993 29-18-1 Ron Atkins 1923 9-7 Frank Dobson 1994 36-19 Ron Atkins Wins 1924 10-4 Frank Dobson 1995 43-17 Ron Atkins 2002 ...................................................................... 53 1925 12-6-1 Frank Dobson 1996 27-25 Ron Atkins 1926 11-5-1 Frank Dobson 1997 34-26 Ron Atkins Losses 1927 10-9 Frank Dobson 1998 41-17-1 Ron Atkins 2005 ...................................................................... 35 1928 15-3 Frank Dobson 1999 41-17 Ron Atkins 1929 8-6 Frank Dobson 2000 25-29 Ron Atkins Win Streak 1930 12-1 Frank Dobson 2001 27-26 Ron Atkins 1935 ...................................................................... 14 1931 4-5 Frank Dobson 2002 53-13 Ron Atkins 1932 8-5 Frank Dobson 2003 48-15 Ron Atkins Batting Average 1933 3-7 Frank Dobson 2004 33-24 Ron Atkins 1926 ....................................................................355 1934 12-7 Dave Miller 2005 22-35 Ron Atkins 1935 18-2-1
    [Show full text]
  • Spitzer's Aides Find It Difficult to Start Anew
    CNYB 07-07-08 A 1 7/3/2008 7:17 PM Page 1 SPECIAL SECTION NBA BETS 2008 ON OLYMPICS; ALL-STAR GAME HITS HOME RUN IN NEW YORK ® PAGE 3 AN EASY-TO-USE GUIDE TO THE VOL. XXIV, NO. 27 WWW.CRAINSNEWYORK.COM JULY 7-13, 2008 PRICE: $3.00 STATISTICS Egos keep THAT MATTER THIS Spitzer’s aides YEAR IN NEW YORK newspaper PAGES 9-43 find it difficult presses INCLUDING: ECONOMY rolling FINANCIAL to start anew HEALTH CARE Taking time off to decompress Local moguls spend REAL ESTATE millions even as TOURISM life. Paul Francis, whose last day business turns south & MORE BY ERIK ENGQUIST as director of operations will be July 11, plans to take his time three months after Eliot before embarking on his next BY MATTHEW FLAMM Spitzer’s stunning demise left endeavor, which he expects will them rudderless,many members be in the private sector. Senior ap images across the country,the newspa- of the ex-governor’s inner circle adviser Lloyd Constantine,who per industry is going through ar- have yet to restart their careers. followed Mr. Spitzer to Albany TEAM SPITZER: guably the darkest period in its A few from the brain trust that and bought a house there, has THEN AND NOW history, with publishers slashing once seemed destined to reshape yet to return to his Manhattan newsroom staff and giants like Tri- the state have moved on to oth- law firm, Constantine Cannon. RICH BAUM bune Co.standing on shaky ground. AT DEADLINE er jobs, but others are taking Working for the hard-driv- WAS The governor’s Things are different in New time off to decompress from the ing Mr.Spitzer,“you really don’t secretary York.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Mens Passages: Discovering the New Map of Mens Lives Pdf, Epub, Ebook
    UNDERSTANDING MENS PASSAGES: DISCOVERING THE NEW MAP OF MENS LIVES PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Gail Sheehy | 298 pages | 04 May 1999 | Random House USA Inc | 9780345406903 | English | New York, United States Understanding Mens Passages: Discovering the New Map of Mens Lives PDF Book Roger Huddleston rated it did not like it Apr 20, Buy at Local Store Enter your zip code below to purchase from an indie close to you. May 04, Lois Duncan rated it it was ok. Enabling JavaScript in your browser will allow you to experience all the features of our site. Maybe that information wasn't available then. Effective early intervention is critical in stopping low and moderate-risk cases of family violence escalating into high-risk situations. The older knowledge we have does not fit with our new realities and our experiences of the world. Willis , James B. The book is broken up into 'this is what you're going through' and 'this My father passed recently and I found myself in a strange, new land where I wasn't sure where I was going and why I didn't know where I was going. Popular author of coloring books for adults and teens, certified cognitive therapist Bella Stitt created this book for relieving stress from everyday life. Sheehy is also a political journalist and contributing editor to Vanity Fair. Nov 10, Sylvia rated it really liked it. Apr 15, Skyqueen rated it really liked it. Among her twelve books is the huge international bestseller that broke the taboo around menopause, The Silent Passage. The lowest-priced brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging where packaging is applicable.
    [Show full text]
  • Professionalanalysis.Pdf (158.5Kb)
    AT YOUR SERVICE: HOW AN AWARD-WINNING DENVER MAGAZINE CATERS TO ITS READERS WITH ITS EYE-POPPING SERVICE JOURNALISM Carson Kohler Jennifer Rowe, Project Chair PROFESSIONAL ANALYSIS Editors can hear his voice throughout the office. There’s a Midwest tinge to it, but, most notably, it booms, which can be intimidating to the fact-checking interns in the cubicles across the hall. The figure attached to the voice seems illusive at times. When rounding the corner, it’s hard not to take a glimpse into his wide-windowed office to see if his sharp eyes are focused on the computer screen. Sometimes, for days at a time, his office stays dark — empty. But Daniel Brogan’s imprint at 5280 magazine is always evident. In 1993, with a degree in journalism from Indiana University and 10 years of professional experience, he founded the Denver city book. From the beginning, the magazine was deemed doomed. Brogan remembers hearing the buzz around town. Businesses were making bets to see how soon Denver’s newest city magazine would fold — just like the ones that came before it. Certainly, with such a track record, it wouldn’t take long. Brogan proved them wrong, though, and service journalism helped keep the new magazine afloat. And I’m one of those fact-checking interns who, at times, find Brogan’s voice intimidating. For the past four months, I’ve served as 5280’s editorial dining intern, and I’ve fact-checked stories, written blog posts and print stories while also creating the ever- so-exciting calendar events and dining guide blurbs.
    [Show full text]
  • 2011 Media Guide.Indd
    GENERAL INFORMATION BASEBALL INFORMATION MEDIA INFORMATION LOCATION ........................................................Orono, Maine HEAD COACH ....................................................Steve Trimper BASEBALL CONTACT.............................................Laura Reed FOUNDED .....................................................................1865 RECORD AT SCHOOL ............................................143-126-2 CELL PHONE ...............................................(207) 478-4256 ENROLLMENT ............................................................12,000 OVERALL RECORD ...............................................315-300-4 OFFICE PHONE ............................................(207) 581-3646 NICKNAME .........................................................Black Bears ASSISTANT COACHES ..............Jason Spaulding, Billy Cather E-MAIL ................................... [email protected] COLORS ........................................................Blue and White 2010 OVERALL RECORD .............................................. 34-22 FAX ...........................................................(207) 581-3297 CONFERENCE .....................................................America East 2010 CONFERENCE RECORD/FINISH .....................17-7 (2nd) PRESS BOX PHONE .....................................(207) 581-1049 MAINE PRESIDENT ..................................................Robert Kennedy STADIUM (CAPACITY) ................Mahaney Diamond (4,400) WEBSITE ........................................www.GoBlackBears.com
    [Show full text]
  • 79Th, Anaheim, CA, August 10-13, 1996)
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 401 568 CS 215 576 TITLE Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (79th, Anaheim, CA, August 10-13, 1996). Newspaper and Magazine Division. INSTITUTION Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. PUB DATE Aug 96 NOTE 316p.; For other sections of these proceedings, see CS 215 568-580. PUB TYPE Collected Works Conference Proceedings (021) EDRS PRICE MFO1 /PC13 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Feminism; *Journalism; *Mass Media Effects; Mass Media Role; *Newspapers; *Periodicals; Popular Culture; Presidential Campaigns (United States); Sex Bias; Victims of Crime IDENTIFIERS Audiotex; *Journalists; Media Bias; *Media Coverage; News Bias; News Sources; Popular Magazines ABSTRACT The Newspaper and Magazine section of the proceedings contains the following 11 papers: "Real-Time Journalism: Instantaneous Change for News Writing" (Karla Aronson and others); "Names in the News: A Study of Journalistic Decision-Making in Regard to the Naming of Crime Victims" (Michelle Johnson); "The Daily Newspaper and Audiotex Personals: A Case Study of Organizational Adoption of Innovation" (Debra Merskin); "What Content Shows about Topic-Team Performance" (John T. Russial); "Have You Heard the News? Newspaper Journalists Consider Audiotex and Other New Media Forms" (Jane B. Singer); "Who Reports the Hard/Soft News? A Study of Differences in Story Assignments to Male and Female Journalists at 'Newsweek'" (Dan Alinanger); "Welcome to Lilliput: The Shrinking of the General Interest in Magazine Publishing" (Erik Ellis); "The Retiring Feminist: Doris E. Fleischman and Doris Fleischman Bernays" (Susan Henry); "'Of Enduring Interest': The First Issue of 'The Readers Digest' as a 'Snapshot' of America in 1922--and its Legacy in a Mass-Market Culture" (Carolyn Kitch); "News Magazine Lead Story Coverage of the 1992 Presidential Campaign" (Mark N.
    [Show full text]
  • 2011 Indiana State Baseball Gosycamores
    Baseball Media Guide 2011 Download date 06/10/2021 08:38:34 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10484/1640 2011 Quick Facts / Table of Contents 2011 Quick Facts Table of Contents Name of School .................. Indiana State University Location .......................................... Terre Haute, Ind. 2011 Quick Facts ....................................................... 1 Facility Upgrades ......................................................... 2 Founded .............................................................. 1865 Gameday at Bob Warn Field ....................................... 3 ....................................................... 10,672 Enrollment 2011 Season Preview ............................................... 4-5 Nickname .................................................. Sycamores 2011 Roster ................................................................. 6 School Colors ........................... Royal Blue & White 2011 Schedule ............................................................. 7 Home Facility .... Bob Warn Field at Sycamore Stadium Capacity ............................................................. 2,000 Coaching Staff Surface .............. Field Turf (Infield), Grass (Outfield) Head Coach Rick Heller ........................................... 8-9 Assistant Coaches ................................................ 10-11 Dimensions ................ 340 (LF), 402 (CF), 340 (RF) Affiliation ......................................... NCAA Division I 2011 Indiana State Sycamores Conference .......................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Feminist Origins of the Midlife Crisis*
    The Historical Journal, , (), pp. – © Cambridge University Press . This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/./), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. doi:./SX THE FEMINIST ORIGINS OF THE MIDLIFE CRISIS* SUSANNE SCHMIDT University of Cambridge ABSTRACT. This article tells the history of the midlife crisis, for the first time. Today, the idea of midlife crisis conjures up images of male indulgence and irresponsibility, but it was first successfully promoted as a feminist concept that applied to men and women equally and described the dissolution of gender roles at the onset of middle age. Although the term was coined by the psychologist Elliott Jaques in the s, it only came into general use two decades later with journalist Gail Sheehy’s bestselling Passages (), as a concept that relied on older understandings of middle age as a welcome ‘release’ from motherhood and domesticity. The feminist origins of the midlife crisis suggest, first, that journalistic publishing can be more significant for the history of an idea than spe- cialists’ theories, even if those precede it. Secondly and more importantly, it sheds new light on Susan Sontag’s classic analysis of the ‘double standard of aging’ by making visible how women used the notion of midlife change to undermine gender hierarchies. One might not have expected the history of the midlife crisis to begin with a shocking scene from a notorious massacre, still less that a woman would tell the tale.
    [Show full text]
  • 1989 Topps Baseball Card Set Checklist
    1 989 TOPPS BASEBALL CARD SET CHECKLIST 1 George Bell 2 Wade Boggs 3 Gary Carter 4 Andre Dawson 5 Orel Hershiser 6 Doug Jones 7 Kevin McReynolds 8 Dave Eiland 9 Tim Teufel 10 Andre Dawson 11 Bruce Sutter 15 Robby Thompson 16 Ron Robinson 17 Brian Downing 18 Rick Rhoden 19 Greg Gagne 20 Steve Bedrosian 21 White Sox Leaders 22 Tim Crews 23 Mike Fitzgerald 24 Larry Andersen 25 Frank White 26 Dale Mohorcic 28 Mike Moore 29 Kelly Gruber 30 Dwight Gooden 31 Terry Francona 32 Dennis Rasmussen 33 B.J. Surhoff 34 Ken Williams 36 Mitch Webster 37 Bob Stanley 38 Paul Runge 39 Mike Maddux 40 Steve Sax 41 Terry Mulholland 42 Jim Eppard 43 Guillermo Hernandez 44 Jim Snyder 45 Kal Daniels 46 Mark Portugal 47 Carney Lansford Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 48 Tim Burke 49 Craig Biggio 50 George Bell 51 Angels Leaders (Mark McLemore) 52 Bob Brenly 53 Ruben Sierra 54 Steve Trout 55 Julio Franco 56 Pat Tabler 58 Lee Mazzilli 59 Mark Davis 60 Tom Brunansky 61 Neil Allen 62 Alfredo Griffin 63 Mark Clear 65 Rick Reuschel 67 Dave Palmer 68 Darrell Miller 69 Jeff Ballard 70 Mark McGwire 71 Mike Boddicker 73 Pascual Perez 74 Nick Leyva 75 Tom Henke 77 Doyle Alexander 78 Jim Sundberg 79 Scott Bankhead 80 Cory Snyder 81 Expos Leaders (Tim Raines) 83 Jeff Blauser 84 Bill Bene 85 Kevin McReynolds 86 Al Nipper 87 Larry Owen 88 Darryl Hamilton 89 Dave LaPoint 90 Vince Coleman 91 Floyd Youmans 92 Jeff Kunkel 93 Ken Howell 96 Rick Cerone 97 Greg Mathews 98 Larry Sheets 99 Sherman Corbett 100 Mike Schmidt 101 Les Straker 102 Mike Gallego Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com©
    [Show full text]