Archive for the 'ivy league' Category

Crime Sprees and STDs

Armed robberies, bacterial meningitis, syphilis and HIV!  Boy, has the Ivy League gotten risqué or what?

Lately, it seems like I’ve been getting CU Police “Crime Alerts” every week or so.  Shortly following the debate about campus violence and gun control (see:  here, here, and here), a “rash of serious criminal incidents” broke out in Collegetown and on campus.  Wow, now I understand why the College Democrats and the Student Assembly did not want to push for concealed carry on campus.  I feel much safer knowing there are unknown robbers out there with guns and knives.  Better them than me!  Right?

Now, in addition to increased criminal activity, there was a “Health Alert for the Cornell community:  Concern Regarding Syphilis and HIV in Tompkins County and at Cornell” waiting for me in my inbox this morning.  The alert has its own page at Gannett’s website and is featured on CU’s “Special Conditions” page.  I have to confess, this is even more exciting than the bacterial meningitis outbreak last month.

From this morning’s email:

Gannett Health Services and the Tompkins County Health Department are working together to make the community aware of the occurrence of multiple cases of syphilis in Tompkins County, including several in the Cornell community—student, faculty, and staff.

Hahaha… but I thought educated people were responsible when they sleep around.  I thought they were above getting STDs.  After all, it’s not like we put up with any of that ridiculously ignorant “abstinence only” education crap here!

Seriously, though:  “student, faculty, and staff”?  Can someone please tell me which professors have switched over to the Department of Whoreology?  Inquiring minds want to know.

American Universities Reject British Boycott

From Phi Beta Cons:

American college and university presidents do something right

They signed a statement published in newspapers today chastising their British colleagues’ targeting of Israeli colleges and universities.

O’Brien links to an article in The Michigan Daily, “Colleges protest boycott with newspaper ad” -

University President Mary Sue Coleman and former University presidents Lee Bollinger and Harold Shapiro, along with presidents of other American colleges, endorsed an advertisement that appeared in the New York Times on Aug. 8 that argued against the United Kingdom’s University and College Union’s proposed boycott of Israeli universities.

The UCU, which has about 120,000 members, passed a resolution 158 to 99 in May that supported a boycott of Israeli universities. Some union members who are unhappy with Israel’s policies concerning relations with Palestine advocated the resolution.

Bollinger, who is now president of Columbia University, criticized the UCU’s decision in a statement entitled, “Boycott Israeli Universities? Boycott Ours, Too!” that was featured in the full-page advertisement. The advertisement listed about 300 names of presidents of higher education institutions who support Bollinger’s statement.

Robert Hornsby, Columbia’s director of media relations, said in an e-mail that Bollinger originally issued the statement featured in the advertisement on June 12.

In his statement, Bollinger challenged the UCU to consider the effect a boycott would have on colleges.

“If the British UCU is intent on pursuing its deeply misguided policy, then it should add Columbia to its boycott list, for we do not intend to draw distinctions between our mission and that of the universities you are seeking to punish,” Bollinger’s statement said.

Coleman first made public her position on the issue in July when she published a statement similar to Bollinger’s on the University website.

“At the University of Michigan, we have many valued connections with colleagues in Israel, and I for one am prepared to stand in solidarity with Israeli academics in the face of a boycott, should it come to pass,” Coleman’s statement said. “It is in the nature of academic boycotts directly to impede academic freedom and the intellectual discourse that are at the heart of our mission in higher education.”

Several prominent universities’ names did not appear in the advertisement, including Harvard University, Yale University and the University of Chicago.

University of Chicago spokeswoman Julie Peterson said in an e-mail that University of Chicago President Robert Zimmer sent his own letter to Sally Hunt, the general secretary of the UCU, on July 31.

“President Zimmer believed he could be most effective by articulating his position directly to the UCU,” Peterson said.

Representatives from Harvard and Yale could not be reached for comment.

Coleman’s statement said that the Association of American Universities, a group of 62 research universities in the U.S. and Canada to which the University of Michigan belongs, also opposes the boycott.

It’s about time.  I wrote about the UK boycott about 3 months ago and it appears that the vast majority of American universities have finally come out on the right side.  Better late than never, I suppose.

 

Interesting tidbit:  although Harvard and Yale have not released statements regarding the boycott, they are members of the Association of American Universities mentioned by Coleman, as are Cornell, Brown, UPenn, Columbia, and many other prestigious institutions.  The full list is here.  Doesn’t this imply that all of these universities are opposed to the boycott?  One can hope.  I can’t seem to find information on the AAU website confirming Coleman’s statement.

Ivy League Balderdash!

Well, I think my mom has opened up a can of worms for my poor little Cornell over at Hot Air. The latest update from see-dubya is about President Skorton’s remarks at the vigil on Thursday afternoon. Namely, his inclusion of the VTech shooter as the 33rd victim in “our family.” By “our family,” we obviously mean the collegiate community at large. (Don’t you feel open and tolerant now that you know we have a family?)

I thought see-dubya’s analysis about the reasoning behind Skorton’s analysis was spot on:

Why in the world did President Skorton give that shout-out to the Korean communities at Cornell? One of two possible explanations is that Skorton thinks they were feeling a great degree of racial guilt for the sins of their monstrous blood-brother. (”Racial guilt” isn’t something most people feel these days, but it is indoctrinated in Ivy League schools.) I’m sure he and most of the Cornell faculty blubber themselves to sleep over the collective sins of white dudes around the world, so it’s only logical to think that Korean-Americans need some special affirmation when a Korean student does something bad. But no need to worry, my friends. President Skorton has absolved you of the stain of Cho.

The other possibility: maybe he was trying to head off an Ugly Racial Incident. But for President Skorton’s brave inclusion of the Korean American Community in his address, Cornell’s vast Intolerant Redneck-American Community would have perpetrated an outrageous wave of despicable hate crimes upon every Korean in Ithaca.

First of all, anyone who doesn’t walk around the hill all day might need a little context: Cornell University suffers from institutional racism. How do we know? Well, the Black community tells us, the Latino community tells us, the Asian community tells us, and of course, the rich, white, liberal community suffering from white-guilt tells us. And in this case the verb “to tell” includes hostile takeovers of various buildings on campus (ever since they put a bank in Willard Straight, making armed takeovers a felony of sorts, the administrative building, Day Hall, has been all the rage).

Obviously, because of Cornell’s record of institutional racism, Skorton would have to be very very careful in how he addressed the VTech shootings. Because they were race-based, like everything else in the world. Obviously. So, he lovingly brought Cho into our family and had the chimes ring not 32, but 33 times in honor of the victims fallen at Virginia Tech.

Shocking and outrageous? Absolutely. Anything out of the ordinary for a Cornell president? Not at all. I suppose it’s easy for non-Cornellians to get shocked and outraged at specific incidents like the VTech vigil, but for someone who is here day in and day out, stuff like this kind of blends together. I’m not saying that I excuse it or even ignore it. On the contrary, it really is disgraceful and worthy of anger. I just have bigger battles to fight on campus than Skorton’s latest purchase of a racial off-set. Seriously, if every conservative Cornellian got themselves in a tizzy over each and every exhibition of liberal idiocy, we would get pretty tired, pretty fast. That’s why I’m satisfied to let non-Cornellians like my mom and in this case, see-dub, take the wheel in Cornell-bashing. (I can only engage in so much self-hatred before it starts to get to me. ;))

P.S. I would prefer if people did not use this incident as an opportunity to say, “See, we should boycott all Ivy League institutions! All of those bastions of liberal propaganda! We’ll show them.” Um, no, you won’t show them. They’ll be happy. The reason I go to Cornell (and pay President Skorton’s salary, via loans at this moment) is so that someday I’ll be able to play on the same playground as the brainwashed liberals that come out of Harvard, Yale, Cornell, et al. (And I’ll be the winner, since everyone knows that conservatives win in the end). How would me going to a lower institution stick it to the man in this case? It wouldn’t. It would just further empower them.