Here's a rather radical statement from a Yale theologian:
" . . . All that has been said of the reasonableness and truth of Christianity is demonstrably valid, whether we have any Christology or not, and whatever we may or may not believe about the historical Jesus. It would still be valid if it should turn out that Jesus was essentially different from what has been commonly believed, or even that he was not truly historical at all . . . it is the systematic thinker's task to lead faith to a sure foundation, independent of the uncertainties of historical investigation."
" . . . arose and, gripping the sides of the podium . . ."
This incorrect usage from Mr. Moretti's Yale Daily News article (link below) is my pet peeve. Senators, Presidents, Clergy even Scholars use"podium" when they mean "lectern".
A podium is a raised platform on which a person stands (pod = foot). If the person in your article was "gripping the sides of the podium" he would be on his KNEES.
A LECTERN is a raised device behind which one delivers a speech or lecture and upon which one places the notes for that speech, or simply "grips" its sides.
Even the renowned author and prodigious scholar, Stacy Schiff, uses this word incorrectly. On page 177 of her charming biography Vera {Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov} she states: "Nabokov and his assistant [Vera] both felt he should be on the syllabus and not behind the podium, a sense that set them apart from the Cornell colleagues".
Since English is fluid, I predict that "podium" will transmogrify itself over the next fifty years (we are currently watching the process before our very eyes), and Presidents, Senators and Scientists will deliver speeches from behind the podium, only they won't be on their knees.
Note : When I Googled "podium" under "Images" only images of lecterns came up, not a single podium. The transmogrification has already OCCURRED on Google!
Posted by The Anti-Yale on January 25, 2011 at 5:24 a.m.
Simon Chaffetz is a junior in Morse College and coordinates business development for the News.
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This teetotalers workgroup article [by Mr. Chaffetz, link above] would be amusing if my father's mother hadn't been hit and run and killed by a drunk driver in East Haven at age 49; if my cousin's 16 year old son the same in Gathersberg, MD; and my 38-year-old house-mate (the mother of four) hit head-on in and killed in Bethel, VT by a 19-year-old drunk driver, also killed, who was the son of a colleague.
I wouldn't advocate a ban on drinking; I would advocate a ban on drinking and DRIVING.
Breatholator ignitions please.
Posted by The Anti-Yale on January 24, 2011 at 5:16 a.m.
NOTE: Two days later, January 24, Monday, it is MINUS28 degrees at Lebanon Airport, which I can see from my livingroom. (My 5-year-old car did not even turn over this morning; my 27-year old car started right up!!) PK
"It's so cold outside that the dogs are sticking to the sidewalks."
Last year, 301 active-duty, reserve and National Guard soldiers committed suicide, compared to 242 in 2009, senior Army officials said. The overall increase comes despite a massive effort on the part of the Army's senior leaders to hire hundreds of mental health and substance abuse counselors and a major push to reduce the stigma among soldiers of seeking mental health care. Most of those efforts have been focused on the Army's active-duty force, which did see a small drop in the number of suicides, from 162 in 2009 to 156 last year.
According to Piero Scaruffi 160 million people were killed in wars and genocides in the 20th century. That is 16 million a decade or 1.6 million a year.
Today's elegant article in the Yale Daily News (link above) by Riley Scripps Ford has achieved what no amount of badgering from Yale posters has succeeded in doing over the last two and a half years: rendered my posting persona redundant.
Exeunt , Stage Left.
PK
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This is a brilliant article: It might be called the Gatsby-ization of Old Money. Some day soon the Yale Bowl will become the Zuckerberg Bowl---or Facebook Field: Mark my words.
I intend to link this article to The-Anti-Yale for it introduces the era which produced my zeal
Posted by The Anti-Yale on January 19, 2011 at 5:20 a.m.
RexMottram08, I'm going to assume you're talking about our esteemed fellow commentator, and I'm going to officially declare this the first time I have EVER agreed with you.
Posted by Yale12 on January 19, 2011 at 12:44 p.m.
For the same reason that Jay Gatz thought he could buy access to the world of Daisy Buchanon with his garish mansion on West Egg and his lavish parties, only THIS time New Money CAN buy access to the world of Old Money.
It may not be Yale Bowl but it will be symbolically the same gesture as Hearst's creation of San Simeone, Jackson's of Neverland and (five blocks from Yale) Frederick Foster Brewster's of Edgerton: the longing of the nouveau riche for a pedigree, and their futile architectural attempts to manufacture one. Hyannis Port, Martha's Vineyard, the Dakota Apartments, anyone?
Posted by The Anti-Yale on January 19, 2011 at 4:46 p.m.
"Gatsby turned out all right at the end; it is what preyed on Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his dreams that temporarily closed out my interest in the abortive sorrows and short-winded elations of men" (Fitzgerald, p. 6).
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