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ROY BRAEGER ‘86 Erica Woda ’04 FORUM: JOHN W. CELEBRATES Tries TO LEVel KLUGE ’37 TELLS GOOD TIMES THE FIELD STORIES TO HIS SON Page 59 Page 22 Page 24 Columbia College September/October 2010 TODAY Student Life A new spirit of community is building on Morningside Heights ’ll meet you for a I drink at the club...” Meet. Dine. Play. Take a seat at the newly renovated bar grill or fine dining room. See how membership in the Columbia Club could fit into your life. For more information or to apply, visit www.columbiaclub.org or call (212) 719-0380. The Columbia University Club of New York 15 West 43 St. New York, N Y 10036 Columbia’s SocialIntellectualCulturalRecreationalProfessional Resource in Midtown. Columbia College Today Contents 24 14 68 31 12 22 COVER STORY ALUMNI NEWS DEPARTMENTS 30 2 S TUDENT LIFE : A NEW B OOK sh E L F LETTER S TO T H E 14 Featured: David Rakoff ’86 EDITOR S PIRIT OF COMMUNITY ON defends pessimism but avoids 3 WIT H IN T H E FA MI L Y M ORNING S IDE HEIG H T S memoirism in his new collec- tion of humorous short stories, 4 AROUND T H E QU A D S Satisfaction with campus life is on the rise, and here Half Empty: WARNING!!! No 4 are some of the reasons why. Inspirational Life Lessons Will Be Homecoming 2010 Found In These Pages. 5 By David McKay Wilson Michael B. Rothfeld ’69 To Receive 32 O BITU A RIE S Hamilton Medal 34 Dr. -
WISCONSIN's ART HISTORY the Art Museum Celebrates 100 Years of Wisconsin Art
Editor-in-Chief Debra Brehmer Associate Editor Calendar Editor Business Manager Therese Gantz Associate Editor-Music From the Editor BobbyDuPah Associate Editor Nathan Guequierre With this issue, Art Muscle celebrates its 2nd 2nd anniversary and we've only begun tapping Photo Editor anniversary. And no, I won't say anything about into its intriguing, yet still mysterious design ca Francis Ford growing pains and two year olds and all that. I'll pabilities. just say that I hope the magazine will continue to grow so we can expand the depth and detail of We invite you to help celebrate the anniversary Art Direction our coverage. by attending the A rf Muscle exhibition and party Barb Paulini from 7 p.m. to ? on Friday, October 7. The celebra We hope that in the past two years, Art Muscle tion will take place in the Art Muscle Ballroom at has helped define Milwaukee's art community 909 W. National Avenue, with live music and Sales Representatives and put us all closer in touch with one another. It short performances by Foothold Dance Collec is important for artists to feel a sense of commu tive, Wild Space Dance Company and Rip Tenor. Lisa Mohan, Sam Woodburn &Kathy Corbin nity and it's important for the public to feel tuned in to the thoughts and motivations of artists. Thanks to all our advertisers for two great years. Printing by Citizen Publishing Also thanks to our freelancers, families, friends So what's ahead? In the upcoming year, we plan and our subscribers. If you enjoy Art Muscle, FRIENDS OF ART MUSCLE to rearrange our format somewhat and add some there's one little thing that you could do that has new features, expand the "opportunities" sec a far greater impact than you could ever imagine: Perry & Bobbie Dinkin Ellen Checota tion, which provides artists with exhibition and Subscribe. -
Adverse Reactions to LSD
Dream Becomes Nightmare: Adverse Reactions to LSD DAVID E. SMITH* & RICHARD B. SEYMOUR* Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) was first syn- psychotomimetic, the psychiatric-pharmacological mod- thesized in 1938, but it was not until 1943 that the drug’s el, that treated the drug experience like a psychosis. ” This profound psychological effects were first discovered. In was followed, though not necessarily superseded, by the that year, shortly after Enrico Fermi initiated the earth’s hallucinogenic model that employed LSD as a tool for first nuclear chain reaction for the Manhattan Project, Dr. studying the mechanisms of perception; the therapeutic Albert Hofmann, who was involved in the discovery of model, which represented rather an about-face for a psy- LSD at Sandoz Pharmaceuticals in Basel, Switzerland, chotomimetic; and then the psychedelic model that pro- accidentally ingested some of the compound and ex- posed that under proper conditions (Metzner 1978: 138) perienced visual alterations and difficulty in riding a bicy- “the experience will be enlightening, productive and con- cle. At the time, he was looking for an analeptic with sciousness expanding. ” stimulant properties similar to those of nikethimide, As each of these models was developed, intriguing which LSD resembles in molecular configuration (Wes- information filtered down to the general public, especially son & Smith 1978). Instead of discovering a new analep- to the not-so-quiet silent generation. This dissemination tic, he had-after a five-year gestation-given birth to of information became a flood when creative people in the most controversial chemical compound of the mid- both the arts and sciences underwent the psychedelic twentieth century. -
Hearings Before the Select Committee on Crime
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 075 760 CG 008 024 TITLE Drugs in Our Schools: Hearings before the Select Committee on Crime. House of Representatives, Ninety-Second Congress, Second Session: San Francisco. INSTITUTION Congress of the U.S., Washington, D.C. House Select Committee on Crime. PUB DATE 72 NOTE 473p. AVAILABLE FROMSuperintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 ($2.75) t EDRS PRICE MF-$0.65 HC-$16.45 DESCRIPTORS *City Problems; City Wide Programs; *D-ig Abuse; Drug Addiction; *Drug Legislation; Legislation; *Legislators; Marihuana; *Narcotics; Publications; School Personnel; School Policy; Socially Deviant Behavior; Social Problems; Urban Schools IDENTIFIERS Congressional Hearings; San Francisco ABSTRACT This document is a collection of the second session of hearings on drug abuse in the schools, conducted for the House of Representatives' Select Committee on Crime. This particular part delves into the drug problem in San Francisco. Witnesses from this city whose statements were heard in the 1972 hearings include school teachers, former drug addicts, undercover police officers, district attorneys, school principals, and executive administrators of city school systems. Relevant data are included in tables and charts throughout the documents. The findings on the other cities involved in these hearings can be found in the ERIC collection. (SES) FILMED FROM BEST AVAILABLE COPY DRUGS IN OUR SCHOOLS HEARINGS BEFORE THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON CRIME HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES NINETY-SECONDCONGRESS SECOND SESSION SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. SEPTEMBER 25-30, 1972 ; SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. U S DEPARTMEN I. OF HEALTH EC'JCATION & WELFARE OFFICE OF EDUCATION THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEENRFPRu DUCED EXACTLY AS RECEIVEDFROM THE PERSON OR ORGANIZATiONIORIG INATING IT POINTS OF VIEW OR O"IN 0 IONS STATED DO NOT NECESSARH.`, REPRESENT OFFICIAL OFFICE OF EDI) ir CATION POSITION OR POLICY (44:3 4C) QI C.5 Printed for the use of the Select Committee on Crime V...) (Created pursuant to H. -
Tea Council's Giant New Sound Search
NOVEMBER 1,1969 S1.00 BBOBIG*204UNIBZ740007K9A1300R BIG ALS RECORuSALES SEVENTY-FIFTH YEAR WOPV5MESI 02903 siNNimpolosisionvisamatninemswohi The International MJsic-Record-Tape Newsweekly COIN MACHINE omr PAGES 59 TO 64 Tea Council's GiantPeace Festival, TV Sound Takes New Sound SearchGovt. Style, Set Cue From Disks ByCLAUDE HALL By ELIOT TIEGEL NEW YORK-One ofthe The promotion will be un- LOS ANGELES-The sound Jimmy Bowen's Amos Produc- greatest searches for record tal- veiled to the iced tea industry For August '70 of television and motion picture tions. ent will he launched nationwide Sunday (2) to Wednesday (5) at musicisabout to undergo a AndyWilliamsandAlan Feb. 1,1970,with Top 40 its Nassau convention. Radio sta- By FRED KIRBY radical change. Amos Engineer- Bernard,theexecutivepro- radio stations participating. tions are being invited to par- ing, a freelanceengineering ducers of the Saturday evening Sponsoring the drive to locate ticipate in the search. Only one NEW YORK - TheU.S. company,hasbeenhiredto hour program, came to Amos and spotlight new sounds and station per market will be in- government, music industry and oversee the musical sound of becausetheywere concerned talents will be the Tea Council volved, on afirst -come,first - other major industries will co- Williams about obtaining a recording in- operateina theweekly"Andy of the U.S.A., Inc., in conjunc- served basis. The search will in- massive"1970 Show" on NBC. And the com- dustrystandardof soundfor tion with Billboard Magazine. clude both large and small mar- United States Peace Festival," pany has just signed an agree- television. Prizes willrange from record kets. -
PDF: V114-N27.Pdf
Commencement Today ~~~~~~~~~~~~Olde~~~s~t\ -f and? Lar~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ge~~~s~tHF IToday: Cool, breezy, 63°F (17°C) TM^J~i;L~ ^^^»S ,P~ l ~ytI?^t&Bg(B6 I Tonight: Clear, chilly, 45°F (7°C) ,atUll0!WU^1S^-r... -. _ _^^ _5 Details, Page 2 Volume 114, Number 27 Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 Friday, May 27, 1994 ,,,,,- _r----------- s~r-iI_ . .· .. Administrators to Shift Jobs in June By Josh Hartmann She was recommended by the Cor- CONTRIBUTING EDITOR poration's executive committee last The vacuum left by last month's night. Her position would start June sudden death of Vice President 1, according to Lois Graham, asso- Constantine B. Simonides '57 will ciate secretary of the Corporation. be filled on June 1, when a reshuf- Current vice presidents Glenn P. fling of senior administration offi- Strehle '58 and James J. Culliton cials will take effect. will take on new responsibilities at President Charles M. Vest the vice presidential level after the announced last week the promotion realignment. Strehle, who currently of Director of Personnel Joan F. oversees resource development, will Rice to vice president for human become vice president for finance; resources and Director of Founda- he remains treasurer of the Institute. tion Relations and Development Culliton, now the vice president for Services Barbara G. Stowe to vice financial operations, will become president for resource development. vice president for administration. In addition, Executive Assistant to the President and Director of Leadership cited Public Relations Services Kathryn Rice joined MIT in 1972 and has A. Willmore is expected to be elect- been director of personnel since THTOMAS R. -
Cruising "Alexander: the Other Side of Dawn" "Can We Talk" 31 Mins. By
CANADIAN LESBIAN AND GAY ARCHIVES Moving Images Cruising •"Different from the others", starring Conrad Veidt Theme(s): Homophobia (German, 1919) Credits: Jerry Weintraub. USA 1980 video/VHS •)"Respect", music video by Erasure (1989) Accession: 2007-119 Theme(s): •Film •Music England video/Beta Accession: "Alexander: The other Side of Dawn" Theme(s): Gay Youth "Family Secrets" Eps#1 "Birth Mothers Never Forget" USA 1977 video/VHS Theme(s): Families Remarks: Taped from Television. TV-movie sequel to Credits: Makin' Movies Inc. Canada 2003 video/VHS•22:45 "Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway" with Accession: 2006-008 Leigh J. McCloskeyas a youth trying to escape the sordid world of male prostitution. Eve Plumb, Earl Holliman, Alan Feinstein, Juliet Mills. "I Believe in the Good of Life" West Wing footage. Accession: 2006-155 Dec. 2001. From West Wing Art Space. Many Art Fags including the debut of The Hidden Cameras. "Can We Talk" 31 mins. By Norman Taylor for the Theme(s): •Art Coalition for Lesbian/ Gay Rights in Ontario. •Parties Credits: Norman Taylor. video/VHS•30:55 Credits: Shot by Guntar Kravis. Canada Dec. 2001 video/VHS Remarks: Item is a slideshow video which discusses and Accession: 2006-053 debunks myths in the gay and lesbian community. Myths include the following: "Gay "Is He. ." can be spotted a mile away", "Homosexuals Theme(s): •Coming Out are known by the type of work they do", •Comedy "Homosexual is a sickness", "Homosexuals are Credits: Director: Linda Carter•Writer: Charlie David•Actor: Charlie child molesters", :Homosexuality is David. Canada 2004 other (see Form Details field)•Mini DV•9 min. -
UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Critical Crossings: Intersections of Passing and Drag in Popular Culture Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/81j0h4fx Author Marsan, Loran Renee Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Critical Crossings: Intersections of Passing and Drag in Popular Culture A dissertation in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Women’s Studies by Loran Renee Marsan 2012 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Critical Crossings: Intersections of Passing and Drag in Popular Culture by Loran Renee Marsan Doctor of Philosophy in Women’s Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2012 Professor Juliet Williams, Co-chair Professor Douglas Kellner, Co-chair My dissertation, Critical Crossings: Intersections of Passing and Drag in Popular Culture, offers an innovative study of the political possibilities of two related performative strategies: Drag and Passing. “Drag” refers to the excessive performance of feminine gender, i.e. drag queens, but more recently has been linked to other parodic performances such as blackface. “Passing” originated in the post- and antebellum eras when mixed-race African-Americans passed as white to escape oppressions. It denotes the believable portrayal of another identity, usually racial or gendered. Both have long been topics of media representations. Probing where and how they are used differently in popular culture yields insight into the operation of identity, engaging such issues as the social construction of authenticity, performance, and the “real.” I argue cinema and television have changed how drag and passing are deployed, such that what ii passes for reality and authenticity comes into question while the purposes and functions of drag and passing are also changed. -
Villanova Digital Library
; ' >^'--, VT.\ '.:•;<..' Pages ^i,\}'iv ; ,•".^'-.,'^^f*c' • THE VILLANOVAN • December 4, 1974 i>>'.: .' r imi^^Tii'vmi^i LAST YEAR 'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fc'fcl ''.' '.•••'•: v.,',.. '.; 1 \m 'jkz • •• • *• • •• . , Pag« 2 • THE VILLANOVAN • December 4, 1974 t^~^\ * Yearbook Cut Back 09cmjnb9r 4, 1974 • THE VILLANOVAN • Pag« 3 Vocalists it,- »!i. : By ANNE WELSH Football Future Assured Copies of the 1975 Belle Air, tional ties with Carl Wolf Villanova's yearbook, will be fewer Studio in Philadelphia to go to the By JOHN HOPKINS and thinner than last year's less expensive Del mar Studios in The '74 Wildcat football team of football, while a significant the necessary privacy and they edition, the Publications Board New York. In addition, the number . ¥ weathered a few tough losses this Concert number opted for redefined agreed by majority vote to retain 'learned from yearbook editor of special effects (involving more season but came through with the priorities which would eliminate Villanova football on a more com- By PATRICK RING unusual costly <'^ .Louis Guarrieri at its Tuesday, and more most important victory in a con- the program. the petitive level, in accordance with The ViUanova Singers and November 19 meeting. photography and/or coloring) in test where the ball wasn't carried a recess followed while the the Villanova Women's Glee Club cor- A overriding priorities facing a increase of about this year's book has been limited. single time. Because of an Catholic, dially invite the community to^ visitors left to allow the Trustees private university. -
In the Apple of Knowledge
triton ti October 31, 1969 Vol. 8 No.5 WORMS IN THE APPLE In recent years, the traditional respect for the sanctity of academic freedom has all but vanished. Issue-seeking pOliticians in both major political parties have at tempted to equate academic freedom with espionage and subversion. Students, finding certain professors and doctrine inimical to their own views, have interrupted classes and shouted down speakers. At Harvard, a professor's research notes, which took two decades to compile, were incinerated by angry students. At UCLA, a highly qualified woman was fired by the Regents because of her political views and affi OF KNOWLEDGE liations. It is regrettable that these are not mere isolated incidents, but part of a trend which is exhibiting increasing vitality. The highly emotional atmosphere surrounding the universities has effectively obscured the meaning of academic freedom. People outside the university forget by Tom Bake r the vital role played by academic freedom in maintaining the democratic nature of Feature Ed itor society. To these people, it has come to mean a special license granted to professors, which often lead s to subversion and pornography. On the other hand, students often feel that certain views are fascist, or racist, and thereby justlJy certain form ~ of behavior such as disrupting classes. This view was well expressed first by that p3.ragon of conservatism, Barry Gold water, who said, "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice; moderation in the pursuit of freedom is no virtue." The traditional notion of academic freedom thus finds itself attacked from both within and without the university, and is in danger of total collapse. -
Radio Television
Belknap Collection for the Performing Arts Radio Television RADIO & TELEVISION The Sound of Radio and Television The golden age of broadcasting from the radio heyday of the 20s, 30s and 40s, when Jack Benny, Bob Hope, The Shadow, Fanny Brice and H.V. Kaltenborn ruled the airwaves, through the television era when variety, drama, comedy, sports and world history flashed into our living rooms, each day. The rise of technology and the extraordinary popularity of radio and television, in the past century, led to revolutionary changes in entertainment, news gathering and delivery, lifestyles and history represented by the sights, sounds and ephemera from a magical and legendary era. Writer Robert Campbell called this broadcasting phenomenon "the reality that changed our world forever." Guide to scripts by Preston Wood. One of the more prolific of scriptwriters from the "Golden Age" of radio and television drama and comedy, Preston Wood has produced an amazing and varied list of credits in his sixty-year career. The PRESTON WOOD SCRIPT COLLECTION spans every genre from the western to science fiction and includes many of the classic television episodes cited by broadcast historians and baby boomer fans of the 50s, 60s and 70s. Dick Summer Audio Collection. Collection of audio compact discs (CDs) featuring the spoken word readings and narrations ("personal audios") of legendary radio personality, voice artist, poet, writer and "story teller" Dick Summer. For more information on the Belknap Collection for the Performing Arts contact: Jim Liversidge University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries Department of Special and Area Studies Collections PO Box 117007 Gainesville, FL 32611-7007 (352) 273-2759 email: [email protected] Copyright © 2003- University of Florida George A. -
1986 Yearbook
hotYEARBOOKs?$<ss? 1 QRR to 1986 Urbana, IL Contents Events Athletics Clubs, etc. Faculty Underclass Seniors Classified 126 Index 128 PERSONALS Library U*e ONLY!! Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/ui1986univ University High 8 5 TO 8 6 Urbana inois 5. HUDSON-AIDS Mnpt *ID; ROCK *gyt T3Cv pmxm %a \3n" *>?Jacobson scores 2^** X r° \^#?- 1 1.raster % meVf R c v ?Sr ^° £ Qk?^^_ mum f*' *^/T^# ft e^jj^ Tit MUay*. C7 t«Mr. /o*^ Four Americans are cl I \\^i Y ova, -5^ °k"c*oVhe« f,°"" /iR-.l'WV » -'Qi.'.'tl I Become, Mrtoev »f the AdiHebSSt °t£'rcTMA ^^^5'f At Sfa sign^ m^^biihoSi^e '( Sf ^ , ° oa/ance dity main themeOofef by TOO 7 We, the Class of 1986 Dedicate This Yearbook to Joanne Wheeler and Pat McLoughlin Though Mrs. Wheeler was able to exert her "passivist" in- Pat often sacrificed early bedtimes, tuna noodle fluence on us for only one long year, she enlightened us in casseroles, and other luxuries to dedicate himself to a number of ways. We learned that school is really slavery, teaching math and coaching girl's basketball. It has not Harriet Beecher Stowe caused the Civil War, type B is bet- asways been easy, but after all, "high school is not to have ter than type A, societies are triangular, and all countries fun; high school is to have pain." It is hard to find people in are rectangular. After reading 700 pages of Mayer, this world who are willing to give so much for so little, but Paynter, Saxton, Shumsky, Smith, and writing 39 essays, "there goes one now." Thanks, Pat, from all of us.