How Yale, the country’s best college golf course, is back from the dead

How Yale, the country’s best college golf course, is back from the dead

from GolfWorld How Yale, the country’s best college golf course, is back from the dead By Joel Beall September 30, 2020   He walked off the course as if witnessing a resurrection. There was a glance back at the green and down the fairway, as to confirm what happened had happened. “It’s miraculous, really,” Robert Massimilian…

Stopping Trump’s Coup

Stopping Trump’s Coup

Editor’s Note: from dissentmagazine.org
Stopping Trump’s Coup By Jim Sleeper ▪

Tuesday night’s presidential debate can best be characterized by two of Donald Trump’s favorite words: it was a “disgrace” and a “disaster.” Our challenge now is to think not just morally or theoretically but also politically, in the way that Trump himself […]

How Life Became an Endless, Terrible Competition

How Life Became an Endless, Terrible Competition

from the atlantic.com How Life Became an Endless, Terrible Competition By Daniel Markovits  Aug. 19th, 2019 . Meritocracy prizes achievement above all else, making everyone—even the rich—miserable. Maybe there’s a way out. Updated at 4:38 p.m. ET on September 4, 2019. In the summer of 1987, I graduated from a public high school in Austin, Texas, and…

Connecting Across the Racial Divide: Two Men at Yale

Connecting Across the Racial Divide: Two Men at Yale

In September ’65, two freshmen arrived at Bingham Hall, assigned to the same entryway. Both had come from highly segregated high schools.  One was black, and he confessed such shock at the sea of white faces that “I couldn’t tell you all apart!  So, I just said ‘hi, there’ and hoped I didn’t need your…

Democratic House chairs: Here’s how we can protect democracy from a lawless president

Democratic House chairs: Here’s how we can protect democracy from a lawless president

Editor’s Note: This is an op-ed John co-authored with other Members of Congress.

In the years following the Watergate scandal, Congress enacted a series of landmark reforms to protect our democracy and restore Americans’ faith in government. […] Though some presidents have bridled at those laws or stretched them, they have fundamentally abided by their limits for 50 years. Until Donald Trump.

Lifelong Learning, New Offering. Are You In?

Lifelong Learning, New Offering. Are You In?

“The main thing I learned at Yale,” I heard more than one classmate say at the reunion, “is how to learn.” Other key features mentioned were the breadth of delicious subjects we had no clue about and a commitment to lifelong learning. “Commencement is not the end,” Kingman said at our graduation.  “It’s the beginning,…

Gregory P. Karampalas – May 26, 2020

Gregory P. Karampalas – May 26, 2020

From the North Andover, MA Eagle-Tribune: Haverhill – Gregory P. Karampalas, 73, of Haverhill, passed away Tuesday, May 26, at Carney Hospital in Dorchester. He was born in Haverhill on March 20, 1947, the son of the late Peter and Chrystine (Costarides) Karampalas. Gregory attended the Haverhill Public School System and was a graduate of…

Class Colloquium 5: Professor Daniel Markovits, The Meritocracy Trap;  September 30th

Class Colloquium 5: Professor Daniel Markovits, The Meritocracy Trap; September 30th

Professor Markovits’ provocative bestseller, The Meritocracy Trap, compellingly argues that the Meritocracy system, which began with our generation and governs the period of our own Yale Admissions, has become a system with unintended negative societal consequences.

This Class Colloquium will be our first with a speaker from the Yale Faculty. He will challenge bedrock meritocratic assumptions, and he promises to include some “two-way dialogue.”

Register in advance for the event; details will be emailed to you.

Direct Democracy or The “Old Boys Network”?

Direct Democracy or The “Old Boys Network”?

Turmoil on campuses, Yale included, is not just a student phenomenon.  Yale Alumni are challenging the nomination process for the “Alumni Fellow” seat on the governing board of trustees (aka “the Yale Corporation”).

There are two ways to get on the ballot; Nominating Committee or Petition. The next three weeks are critical – will these two Petition drives work? What’s at stake is nothing less than the transparency of the nominating process itself. Learn more; maybe sign a petition?

Report From The Medved Class Colloquium

Report From The Medved Class Colloquium

Mike Medved does a three hour talk-radio show EVERY DAY, and recently he’s been broadcasting from his home in Washington State.  After he was done for the day and took a half hour break, he joined over 100 interested classmates for the fourth in our series of Class Colloquia, this one being “A View from the Right, a conservative looks at the current state of politics.”

Here is a recording of Michael’s presentation and some Q&A.