FFRF Short- Circuits P.A. Prayer

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

FFRF Short- Circuits P.A. Prayer Complimentary Copy Join FFRF Now! Vol. 28 No. 7 Published by the Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc. September 2011 Mississippi school ignored own policy FFRF short- circuits P.A. prayer This is what an atheist looks like! FFRF staff, volunteers and members from the Madison, Wis., area are among those pictured in this “just for fun” photo he Freedom From Religion at the Wisconsin Capitol. All are modeling FFRF’s newest “Out of the Closet” T-shirt, which is available in sweatshop- T free, unisex and women’s fitted tee versions for $20 postpaid at ffrf.org/shop. Foundation’s letter of complaint on behalf of Mississippi FFRF members and supporters of secular government Aug. 10 letter to Superintendent Mil- of the loudspeaker prayers. Two days is committed to following the law to DeSoto County Schools in Hernan- ton Kuykendall objected to prayer over later, Treadway met with the School and to protecting the freedoms do, Miss., rankled residents, many of the loudspeaker at athletic events and Board. After the meeting, the paper of all students, both those who whom responded like pit vipers. Did prayer at high school graduations. “It is quoted Treadwell: “Our current policy wish to exercise their religious school officials realize that prayer at also our information and understand- is not to have prayers at football games, freedoms and those who prefer football games and other sporting ing that students are often encouraged and we’re going to abide by that which not to exercise those rights. events was against the law and the dis- by their teachers to pray before meals. we believe the law to be. We will not Treadway told the Times-Tribune trict’s own policy, but choose to look Our complainant also informs us that a have prayer over the P.A. The princi- that he knew that FFRF had contested the other way until called on it? prayer each year at the graduation cer- pals have all expressed they are aware such prayer elsewhere. “I was aware FFRF’s complaint dominated TV emony, some led by students and some of the law and intend to abide by it.” that other districts in Tennessee and news and headlines for at least two led by you, the superintendent. We This is the district’s policy on reli- Mississippi had received the letter and weeks in August in Hernando and understand these prayers are mostly gion, adopted in 2008: was expecting something this year or nearby Memphis. Christian-based prayers.” next year.” Staff Attorney Stephanie Schmitt’s Schmitt noted that it’s illegal for a School administrators, teach- Under mounting pressure from reli- public school to organize, sponsor and ers and staff shall take a neutral gious people, Superintendent Kuyken- lead prayers at athletic events, and that approach regarding the promo- dall made this public statement Aug. the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly tion of prayer or other religious 24. “In my opinion, most people do Inside This Issue struck down formal teacher or school- activities in schools or at school- not realize that this organization out of led prayer in public schools. “More sponsored events. They cannot Wisconsin doesn’t really care if we have importantly, the Supreme Court has interfere with students exercising prayer in our schools. They see an op- Happier struck down pregame invocations even their religious rights as permitted portunity to try and accuse us of break- without God — when they are student initiated.” by law and they cannot tell or sug- ing the law and therefore give them a College essay The nation’s highest court has also gest to students that they should chance to sue our district and win a winners struck down prayers at public high pray or participate in religious Continued on page 3 Page 8 school graduations, noted Schmitt, cit- activities. Prayer over the inter- ing Lee v. Weisman and other cases. “It is com or at school-related activi- FFRF victories no defense that graduations are events ties shall not be allowed except end at which participation or attendance as specifically stated above. Stu- is voluntary. Courts have summarily dents may begin the school day Last violations rejected arguments that voluntariness with a brief period of quiet re- Pages 6–7 excuses a constitutional violation.” flection of up to 60 seconds. This Call to “The law is clear. High school grad- is not intended to be a religious uations must also be secular to protect service or exercise. Administra- 2011 “Above us the freedom of conscience of all stu- tors, teachers and staff should only sky” dents.” not conduct themselves in any FFRF On Aug. 20, the Desoto Times- manner that would suggest that Steven Pinker Page 13 Tribune reported that Kuykendall this period of quiet reflection is a had asked the school’s attorney, Keith time of prayer but should remain Convention Treadway, to investigate the legality neutral in this activity. The Board See back page Page 2 Freethought Today Madison, Wisconsin September 2011 Meet a Legal Intern Name: Laura A. Steigerwald. reason I’m an atheist. Where and when I was born: New How I came to work as an FFRF Year’s Eve 1979 in Brookfield, Wis. I legal intern: I’ve been a freethinker grew up in adjacent Elm Grove and since about age 14 when I refused to moved back to Brookfield when I was participate in the Catholic sacrament 14. Elm Grove is an ultra-conservative, of confirmation. Accelerating the pro- wealthy area known for large Catholic cess around that time was witnessing families. It’s where my father grew up the aftermath of my dad leaving my as the eldest of nine children. I’m sure mom for a much younger woman and if it were legal to build a fence around the hypocrisy of them confessing their a village, Elm Grove would. “sin” and receiving communion right Family: My mother’s side is made after they got married, as if nothing up of hardworking, liberal Democrats, had ever happened. and my father’s side is the complete op- My mom saved an Isthmus [weekly posite. I’m much closer to my mother’s newspaper] article with Dan and Annie side. I have one brother, who married Laurie on the cover and showed it to a Lutheran a year ago. It was quite sad me. That’s how I became familiar with to witness the controversy stirred up by FFRF. Then I began following FFRF my militant Catholic aunts (both mar- and all the great things they do. I ap- ried to Lutherans) over my brother plied for an internship and feel super- marrying a Lutheran. Apparently, he lucky to have gotten one. will not go to the same heaven as his What I do here: I help out the staff wife because Catholics go to a higher attorneys with various tasks. I do re- level of heaven? I’m sure they have search on the Internet and draft letters computers in heaven, so they can prob- and emails. ably Skype. At least now I don’t have to What I like best about it: I love the explain why I’m an atheist. confidence I have that no one here will Laura Steigerwald has put her “Cat-lick” roots behind her. Education: I went to Catholic grade judge me for my nonreligious beliefs school, where I was teased and tor- or my sexual orientation. I love being that), motorcycles, jet skis, boats, water Life and all the awesome people I work mented for my weight and for being surrounded by freethinkers and LGBT skiing, “Up North,” movies, NPR and with. a tomboy. After years of my parents allies. I also love working with Staff Wisconsin Public Radio, Rachel Mad- Things I smite: Narrow minds, dog- fighting over it, they let me transfer in Attorney Patrick Elliott, because he is dow, computers, the Constitution and ma, oppression, homophobia, sexism, seventh grade to public school, where super-nice and patient. Then again, the Internet (which, if it were a play- racism, pollution, genocide, theocra- the teasing stopped. I got my associ- everyone here is super-nice. I’m also ground, Google would be the most cies, sunburn, hot and humid weather, ate’s degree in computer information learning a lot about the Establishment amazing, multi-functional jungle gym things that smell bad, blue cheese, systems from Waukesha County Tech- Clause and First Amendment. on it). green olives, the Religious Right, FOX nical College and then transferred to Something funny that’s happened: I like UW-Whitewater and all the News, Rush Limbaugh, tripping and Carroll University. The package that came with “SEE U amazing professors I’ve had there, and falling over nothing, slow computers The entire time I was in school, I IN HEL” scrawled on the outside. At I love my job at Office of Residence and broken printers. worked in information technology at a least this person admits that he or she medium-sized, global company based is going to hell! Maybe in his or her re- in Milwaukee. After several years work- ligion, bad spelling is a mortal sin? ing in IT, I decided to pursue a legal My legal interests are: Labor and FFRF welcomes 8 new career. In May, I graduated with a bach- employment law (discrimination, EEO, elor of business administration in hu- ADA, worker’s comp, unemployment, man resources and legal studies from labor contracts, etc.), constitutional the University of Wisconsin-Whitewa- law, criminal law and immigration law. Lifetime Members ter. I will start law school this fall at I want to fight for the “little guy.” UW-Madison.
Recommended publications
  • How Different Are the Irish?
    Technological University Dublin ARROW@TU Dublin Articles School of Business and Humanities 2015-3 How Different are the Irish? Eamon Maher Technological University Dublin, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ittbus Part of the Catholic Studies Commons Recommended Citation Maher, E. (2015) How Different are the Irish? in Doctrine & Life, Vol. 65, March 2015, no.3, pp. 2-11 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Business and Humanities at ARROW@TU Dublin. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by an authorized administrator of ARROW@TU Dublin. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 License How Different Are the Irish? EAMON MAHER HIS review-article sets about assessing the significance of a new T collection of essays edited by Tom Inglis, Are the Irish Different?1 Tom Inglis is the foremost commentator on the factors that led to the Catholic Church in Ireland securing a 'special position' during the ninetenth and twentieth centuries.2 The Church's 'moral monopoly' has effectively been ceroded by a number of recent developments; the increased secularisation that accompanied greater prosperity, the tendency among a better educated laity to find their own answers to whatever moral dilemmas assail them, and, of course, the clerical abuse scandals. But even in the 1980s, and earlier, change was afoot. We read in Moral Monopoly: The criterion of a good Irish Catholic has traditionally been per­ ceived as one who received the sacraments regularly and who fol­ lowed as well as possible the rules and regulations of the Church.
    [Show full text]
  • The Donald Trump-Rupert Murdoch Relationship in the United States
    The Donald Trump-Rupert Murdoch relationship in the United States When Donald Trump ran as a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, Rupert Murdoch was reported to be initially opposed to him, so the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post were too.1 However, Roger Ailes and Murdoch fell out because Ailes wanted to give more positive coverage to Trump on Fox News.2 Soon afterwards, however, Fox News turned more negative towards Trump.3 As Trump emerged as the inevitable winner of the race for the nomination, Murdoch’s attitude towards Trump appeared to shift, as did his US news outlets.4 Once Trump became the nominee, he and Rupert Murdoch effectively concluded an alliance of mutual benefit: Murdoch’s news outlets would help get Trump elected, and then Trump would use his powers as president in ways that supported Rupert Murdoch’s interests. An early signal of this coming together was Trump’s public attacks on the AT&T-Time Warner merger, 21st Century Fox having tried but failed to acquire Time Warner previously in 2014. Over the last year and a half, Fox News has been the major TV news supporter of Donald Trump. Its coverage has displayed extreme bias in his favour, offering fawning coverage of his actions and downplaying or rubbishing news stories damaging to him, while also leading attacks against Donald Trump’s opponent in the 2016 presidential election, Hillary Clinton. Ofcom itself ruled that several Sean Hannity programmes in August 2016 were so biased in favour of Donald Trump and against Hillary Clinton that they breached UK impartiality rules.5 During this period, Rupert Murdoch has been CEO of Fox News, in which position he is also 1 See e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2020 Election 2 Contents
    Covering the Coverage The 2020 Election 2 Contents 4 Foreword 29 Us versus him Kyle Pope Betsy Morais and Alexandria Neason 5 Why did Matt Drudge turn on August 10, 2020 Donald Trump? Bob Norman 37 The campaign begins (again) January 29, 2020 Kyle Pope August 12, 2020 8 One America News was desperate for Trump’s approval. 39 When the pundits paused Here’s how it got it. Simon van Zuylen–Wood Andrew McCormick Summer 2020 May 27, 2020 47 Tuned out 13 The story has gotten away from Adam Piore us Summer 2020 Betsy Morais and Alexandria Neason 57 ‘This is a moment for June 3, 2020 imagination’ Mychal Denzel Smith, Josie Duffy 22 For Facebook, a boycott and a Rice, and Alex Vitale long, drawn-out reckoning Summer 2020 Emily Bell July 9, 2020 61 How to deal with friends who have become obsessed with 24 As election looms, a network conspiracy theories of mysterious ‘pink slime’ local Mathew Ingram news outlets nearly triples in size August 25, 2020 Priyanjana Bengani August 4, 2020 64 The only question in news is ‘Will it rate?’ Ariana Pekary September 2, 2020 3 66 Last night was the logical end 92 The Doociness of America point of debates in America Mark Oppenheimer Jon Allsop October 29, 2020 September 30, 2020 98 How careful local reporting 68 How the media has abetted the undermined Trump’s claims of Republican assault on mail-in voter fraud voting Ian W. Karbal Yochai Benkler November 3, 2020 October 2, 2020 101 Retire the election needles 75 Catching on to Q Gabriel Snyder Sam Thielman November 4, 2020 October 9, 2020 102 What the polls show, and the 78 We won’t know what will happen press missed, again on November 3 until November 3 Kyle Pope Kyle Paoletta November 4, 2020 October 15, 2020 104 How conservative media 80 E.
    [Show full text]
  • Roman Catholic Church in Ireland 1990-2010
    The Paschal Dimension of the 40 Days as an interpretive key to a reading of the new and serious challenges to faith in the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland 1990-2010 Kevin Doherty Doctor of Philosophy 2011 MATER DEI INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION A College of Dublin City University The Paschal Dimension of the 40 Days as an interpretive key to a reading of the new and serious challenges to faith in the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland 1990-2010 Kevin Doherty M.A. (Spirituality) Moderator: Dr Brendan Leahy, DD Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2011 DECLARATION I hereby certify that this material, which I now submit for assessment on the programme of study leading to the award of Ph.D. is entirely my own work and has not been taken from the work of others save and to the extent that such work has been cited and acknowledged within the text of my work. ID No: 53155831 Date: ' M l 2 - 0 1 DEDICATION To my parents Betty and Donal Doherty. The very first tellers of the Easter Story to me, and always the most faithful tellers of that Story. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS A special thanks to all in the Diocese of Rockville Centre in New York who gave generously of their time and experience to facilitate this research: to Msgr Bob Brennan (Vicar General), Sr Mary Alice Piil (Director of Faith Formation), Marguerite Goglia (Associate Director, Children and Youth Formation), Lee Hlavecek, Carol Tannehill, Fr Jim Mannion, Msgr Bill Hanson. Also, to Fr Neil Carlin of the Columba Community in Donegal and Derry, a prophet of the contemporary Irish Church.
    [Show full text]
  • PCCE Brochure
    Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement Business Law in the Public Interest Leslie Caldwell, Maria T. Vullo ’87, Assistant Attorney General, Brian A. Benczkowski, Assistant Superintendent, Criminal Division, Geoffrey S. Berman, U.S. Attorney, Attorney General, Criminal Division, NY Department of U.S. Department of Justice Southern District of New York U.S. Department of Justice Financial Services Jay Clayton, Deputy Attorney General Deputy Attorney General Chair, U.S. Securities Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein Sally Quillian Yates and Exchange Commission Eric Holder Mark Steward, Jeh Charles Johnson, Director of Enforcement Preet Bharara, Partner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, and Market Oversight, U.S. Attorney, Makan Delrahim, Assistant Attorney Wharton & Garrison; former Financial Conduct Southern District General, Antitrust Division, Secretary, U.S. Department Authority, U.K. of New York U.S. Department of Justice of Homeland Security John Demers, Assistant Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Mary Jo White, Chair, U.S. Lisa Osofsky, Attorney General, Civil Division, National Security Division, Securities and Exchange Director, Serious U.S. Department of Justice U.S. Department of Justice Commission Fraud Office, U.K. IV History and Mission The Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement (PCCE) at NYU School of Law is a law and policy program created to promote effective enforcement and compliance. Each year PCCE hosts conferences and forums, bringing together some of the most prominent aca- demics, lawyers, and judges in the world for in-depth discussions about how to structure enforcement policy and compliance to effectively deter corporate misconduct. By gathering experts with diverse experi- ence and viewpoints, we undertake the collaborative process of understanding and deterring corporate misconduct; building efficient, effective, and sustain- able compliance programs; and establishing a fair and just process in accomplishing these goals.
    [Show full text]
  • August 4, 2021 VIA E-MAIL Joon H. Kim Anne L. Clark Special Deputies
    August 4, 2021 VIA E-MAIL Joon H. Kim Anne L. Clark Special Deputies to the First Deputy Attorney General Office of the Attorney General The Capitol Albany, NY 112224-0341 Re: Response to Special Investigators’ Report Dear Counsel: As outside counsel to the Executive Chamber, we write to express our client’s deep concerns about the fairness of your investigation, and the lack of neutrality and impartiality with which it was conducted and concluded. First, it is very disappointing that you refused to provide the subjects of the investigation, many of whom are current and former Chamber officers and employees, with an opportunity to review and respond to your findings before they became public today.1 Unlike civil litigation or criminal prosecutions, where an investigation is followed by the opportunity for a trial or a hearing, your report is the end of the line. There will be no formal setting in which those whose conduct the report discusses will have a meaningful opportunity to challenge, rebut, or even raise questions about the investigators’ accuracy, their credibility determinations, or their thoroughness. That lack of process explains why it has now become commonplace in circumstances like these for agencies such as the New York Inspector General,2 the U.S. Department of Justice’s 1 We also note that you did not even alert us that you were releasing your report today. 2 See, e.g., State of New York Offs. of the Inspector Gen., Investigation of the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles Political Subdivision Program at 4 (Mar.
    [Show full text]
  • Volume 11, 2009
    Technological University Dublin ARROW@TU Dublin Issues Irish Communications Review 2009-01-01 Volume 11, 2009 Ellen Hazelkorn Technological University Dublin, [email protected] Nora French Technological University Dublin Wolfgang Truetzschler Technological University Dublin Follow this and additional works at: https://arrow.tudublin.ie/jouicriss Part of the Mass Communication Commons Recommended Citation Dublin Institute of Technology : Irish communications review, Volume 11, 2009. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Irish Communications Review at ARROW@TU Dublin. It has been accepted for inclusion in Issues by an authorized administrator of ARROW@TU Dublin. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 License IRISH COMMUNICATIONS REVIEW Vol Articles Representations of the Knowledge Economy: Irish Newspapers’ Discourses on a Key Policy Idea Brian Trench Whose Development? Framing of Ireland’s Aid Commitments by Institutional Sources and the Media During and After the Celtic Tiger Cliona Barnes, Anthony Cawley Media Discourses on Autonomy in Dying and Death Christina Quinlan The Irish Punditocracy as Contrarian Voice: Opinion Coverage of the Workplace Smoking Ban Declan Fahy Significant Television: Journalism, Sex Abuse and the Catholic Church in Ireland Colum Kenny Suing the Pope and Scandalising the People: Irish Attitudes to Sexual Abuse by Clergy Pre- and Post-Screening of a Critical Documentary Michael J. Breen, Hannah McGee, Ciaran O’Boyle, Helen Goode, Eoin Devereux Run out of the Gallery: The Changing Nature of Irish Political Journalism Kevin Rafter Hollywood Representations of Irish Journalism: A Case Study of Veronica Guerin Pat Brereton Infringement Nation: Morality, Technology and Intellectual Property Eadaoin O’Sullivan Reviews Eoin Devereux Understanding the Media .
    [Show full text]
  • Targeted Sampling from Massive Block Model Graphs with Personalized Pagerank∗
    Targeted sampling from massive block model graphs with personalized PageRank∗ Fan Chen1, Yini Zhang2, and Karl Rohe1 1Department of Statistics 2School of Journalism and Mass Communication University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA Abstract This paper provides statistical theory and intuition for Personalized PageRank (PPR), a popular technique that samples a small community from a massive network. We study a setting where the entire network is expensive to thoroughly obtain or maintain, but we can start from a seed node of interest and \crawl" the network to find other nodes through their connections. By crawling the graph in a designed way, the PPR vector can be approximated without querying the entire massive graph, making it an alternative to snowball sampling. Using the degree-corrected stochastic block model, we study whether the PPR vector can select nodes that belong to the same block as the seed node. We provide a simple and interpretable form for the PPR vector, highlighting its biases towards high degree nodes outside of the target block. We examine a simple adjustment based on node degrees and establish consistency results for PPR clustering that allows for directed graphs. These results are enabled by recent technical advances showing the element-wise convergence of eigenvectors. We illustrate the method with the massive Twitter friendship graph, which we crawl using the Twitter API. We find that (i) the adjusted and unadjusted PPR techniques are complementary approaches, where the adjustment makes the results particularly localized around the seed node and (ii) the bias adjustment greatly benefits from degree regularization. Keywords Community detection; Degree-corrected stochastic block model; Local clustering; Network sampling; Personalized PageRank arXiv:1910.12937v2 [cs.SI] 1 Jul 2020 1 Introduction Much of the literature on graph sampling has treated the entire graph, or all of the people in it, as the target population.
    [Show full text]
  • ACLU V. Clapper
    Case 1:13-cv-03994-WHP Document 33 Filed 08/26/13 Page 1 of 52 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION; AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION; NEW YORK CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION; and NEW YORK CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, 13 Civ. 3994 (WHP) Plaintiffs, ECF Case v. JAMES R. CLAPPER, in his official capacity as Director of National Intelligence; KEITH B. ALEXANDER, in his official capacity as Director of the National Security Agency and Chief of the Central Security Service; CHARLES T. HAGEL, in his official capacity as Secretary of Defense; ERIC H. HOLDER, in his official capacity as Attorney General of the United States; and ROBERT S. MUELLER III, in his official capacity as Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Defendants. DEFENDANTS’ MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT STUART F. DELERY PREET BHARARA Assistant Attorney General United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York JOSEPH H. HUNT Director DAVID S. JONES TARA M. La MORTE ANTHONY J. COPPOLINO JOHN D. CLOPPER Deputy Director CHRISTOPHER HARWOOD Assistant United States Attorney s JAMES J. GILLIGAN 86 Chambers Street, 3rd Floor Special Litigation Counsel Tel. No. (212) 637-2739 (Jones) Fax No. (212) 637-2730 MARCIA BERMAN [email protected] Senior Trial Counsel [email protected] [email protected] BRYAN DEARINGER [email protected] Trial Attorney U.S. Department of Justice Washington, D.C. Case 1:13-cv-03994-WHP Document 33 Filed 08/26/13 Page 2 of 52 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page PRELIMINARY STATEMENT……………………………………………………………….
    [Show full text]
  • "The Buck Stops Here": Barring Executives for Corporate Violations
    University of Chicago Legal Forum Volume 2012 Article 7 2012 Making Sure "The uckB Stops Here": Barring Executives for Corporate Violations Peter J. Henning Follow this and additional works at: http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/uclf Recommended Citation Henning, Peter J. (2012) "Making Sure "The uckB Stops Here": Barring Executives for Corporate Violations," University of Chicago Legal Forum: Vol. 2012, Article 7. Available at: http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/uclf/vol2012/iss1/7 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Chicago Unbound. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Chicago Legal Forum by an authorized administrator of Chicago Unbound. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Making Sure "The Buck Stops Here": Barring Executives for Corporate Violations Peter J. Henringt When the sentence for a crime is not quickly carried out, the hearts of the people are filled with schemes to do wrong. Ecclesiastes 8:11 INTRODUCTION The movement called "Occupy Wall Street" has sought to take over locations in New York City and elsewhere to protest what it sees as corporate greed and corruption that have led to a growing inequality between powerful moneyed interests and "the other 99 percent." The protests in some ways harken back to the 1960s, with large numbers arrested amidst accusations of police brutality, although unlike earlier efforts to stop the Vietnam War, it is not clear what the protesters hope to accomplish be- yond voicing their objection to the status quo. A prominent target of their ire is bankers, with one protester quoted as saying, "I think a good deal of the bankers should be in jail"1-although no particular crime was identified.
    [Show full text]
  • Orchestrating Public Opinion
    Paul ChristiansenPaul Orchestrating Public Opinion Paul Christiansen Orchestrating Public Opinion How Music Persuades in Television Political Ads for US Presidential Campaigns, 1952-2016 Orchestrating Public Opinion Orchestrating Public Opinion How Music Persuades in Television Political Ads for US Presidential Campaigns, 1952-2016 Paul Christiansen Amsterdam University Press Cover design: Coördesign, Leiden Lay-out: Crius Group, Hulshout Amsterdam University Press English-language titles are distributed in the US and Canada by the University of Chicago Press. isbn 978 94 6298 188 1 e-isbn 978 90 4853 167 7 doi 10.5117/9789462981881 nur 670 © P. Christiansen / Amsterdam University Press B.V., Amsterdam 2018 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of the book. Every effort has been made to obtain permission to use all copyrighted illustrations reproduced in this book. Nonetheless, whosoever believes to have rights to this material is advised to contact the publisher. Table of Contents Acknowledgments 7 Introduction 10 1. The Age of Innocence: 1952 31 2. Still Liking Ike: 1956 42 3. The New Frontier: 1960 47 4. Daisies for Peace: 1964 56 5. This Time Vote Like Your Whole World Depended On It: 1968 63 6. Nixon Now! 1972 73 7. A Leader, For a Change: 1976 90 8. The Ayatollah Casts a Vote: 1980 95 9. Morning in America: 1984 101 10.
    [Show full text]
  • Programs and Events at HCNY
    Programs and Events at HCNY Here is just a sampling of our speakers Business Leaders/CEOs Legal Roger Ferguson, CEO, TIAA-CREF Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern Hank Greenberg, former CEO, AIG District of New York Jim Cramer, CNBC Professor Cass Sunstein, legal policy expert, Robin Hayes, CEO, JetBlue social engineer Dave MacLennan, CEO, Cargill NYC Prominent Figures Education Raymond Kelly, NYC Police Commissioner Dr. Pasi Sahlberg, Finland’s Minister Robert Tierney, NYC Landmarks of Education Preservation Chair Dennis Walcott, NYC Schools Chancellor Chief Robert Boyce, Chief of Detectives, NYPD Edward Cardinal Egan, American Cardinal of the Environment Roman Catholic Church Mark Tercek, CEO, The Nature Conservancy Musical Events Economics St. John the Divine Choir Jeffrey Sachs, economics professor Simone Dinnerstein, pianist Aletheia Piano Trio Fashion Designers The Leipzig String Quartet Donna Karan Yoonie Han, pianist Tommy Hilfiger The Alexander String Quartet International Affairs/Foreign Policy Nobel Laureates Prince Turki Al Faisal, former Ambassador to the Martti Ahtisaar, Nobel Laureate for Peace US and member of the Saudi royal family Martin Chalfie, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry Mohammad Javad Zarif, Foreign Minister of Iran Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Laureate in Economics Fareed Zakaria, host of CNN’s flagship foreign affairs show Performing Arts/Arts Ambassador Zahir Tanin, representative from Misty Copeland, principal dancer with the Afghanistan to the UN American Ballet Theatre Oh Joon, South Korean Ambassador to the UN Leah Dickerman, MOMA Curator Annie Leibovitz, American portrait photographer Journalists Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl Wu Dunn, United States Government Officials The New York Times David Gergen, Presidential Advisor Jeffrey Toobin, CNN Donald Rumsfeld, former Secretary of Defense We also feature wine tastings, museum tours, family events and young alumni events such as the monthly Stein Club.
    [Show full text]