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Daily Archives: June 3, 2017
Southwest Airlines adds Cincinnati, Caribbean hot spots in schedule shifts Sunday – Dallas Business Journal
Posted: June 3, 2017 at 12:51 pm
Dallas Business Journal | Southwest Airlines adds Cincinnati, Caribbean hot spots in schedule shifts Sunday Dallas Business Journal Those are among the scheduling changes that take effect Sunday for Dallas-based discount carrier Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV). Also on Sunday, Southwest is launching four flights from Fort Lauderdale to Caribbean destinations. They are: Montego Bay, ... Southwest Airlines announces details of new Caribbean service |
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List Of MicroNations No Trouble – Don’t Mess
Posted: at 12:46 pm
With several important qualifications, a micronation is any entity which purports to be or has the appearance of being a sovereign state but isnt. Micronations are typically created and maintained by one person or family. Many exist solely on the internet, or in the imagination of their creators. Some have a more corporeal existence, making ambit claims over, or occasionally even physically occupying defined geographical locations albeit often tiny, remote or uninhabitable ones and producing physical artefacts such as stamps, coins, banknotes, passports, medals and flags. Micronations are generally viewed as ephemeral, eccentric and somewhat amusing by most external observers. Micronations should not to be confused with, which are small extant sovereign states such as the Andorra, Kiribati, Monaco, Nauru, San Marino and the Vatican. Nor should they be confused with, or exile government groups, which typically have many hundreds or thousands of active supporters, and are often engaged in armed campaigns in support of their aims against the governments of one or more sovereign states. The purpose of this website is to serve as a portal to the world of micronations, document the micronation phenomenon in as objective, accurate, comprehensive and accessible a manner as possible, and to facilitate communication between micronationalists and those interested in micronations.
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This Destination Wedding Venue on a Private Island Is Actually AffordablePromise! – Brides.com
Posted: at 12:46 pm
There's something to be said for having an island wedding with a "castaway" feeling, but it's not easy to achieve that and still give your guests the kind of luxurious accommodations that many of them crave when they travel to a tropical destination . Frequently, choosing a remote-feeling destination wedding location means having to ask your guests to make compromises. Unless you choose to get married on Palomino Island.
Palomino Island is one of only three privately-owned islands in Puerto Rico. It's just a little over 200 acres, and it has been owned by the same family for generations. The vast majority of the island has been rented to the Waldorf Astoria's El Conquistador Resort , a popular destination wedding venue on the east end of Puerto Rico, about an hour's drive from San Juan.
While El Conquistador's gardens and terraces on the cliff overlooking the water (and Palomino Island) are popular ceremony locations, for brides seeking a beach ceremony in an unforgettable locale, the resort has a very special treat for them on the shores of its private island.
There's a ferry that runs between the resort and the island every 30 minutes, free to guests of the hotel. It's only a 15-minute trip each way, and many couples choose to get married on the private island, and take their wedding pictures there, before returning to the resort for a fabulously posh reception. Choosing to get married before the regular ferries stop running at 5:30 pm keeps your budget in check, as all of your guests will travel to and from your ceremony for free. But not to worry, El Conquistador has kept the rates reasonable if you choose to charter your return trip so that you can capture sunset in your wedding photos.
For brides and grooms attracted to the Gilligan's Island -vibe of Palomino Island, it's possible to rent the entire private island for your wedding festivities. As in, you can get married on a beautiful Caribbean island that is entirely yours for the evening, and treat your guests to a fabulous tropical experience that is unlike anything they can experience anyplace else.
Just because Palomino evokes a castaway feeling doesn't mean your wedding ceremony or reception has to be any less elegant and sophisticated than you want. El Conquistador and its recommended vendors have designed numerous elaborate weddings, and other special events, on Palomino. You can have as many bells and whistles as your budget allows. For those who choose the private island for its Jimmy Buffet-esque appeal, you can stick with that theme and keep it casual while your guests party all night long. On a PRIVATE island that you and your fianc have rented for your entire wedding night.
Kamil Rivera Lopez, a catering sales manager at El Conquistador who plans weddings, explains that brides and grooms can literally have anything they want catered to their wedding reception on Palomino.
"We take everything over to the island on the ferries, and set it up exactly as the clients imagined it would look," Kamil says. The only caveat to her "anything you want and can afford" policy is elephants. The resort is popular for Indian weddings, and she's had that request more than once. There are no elephants available for rent in Puerto Rico. However, Palomino Island is equipped with beautiful horses that are frequently brought into service for wedding ceremonies and photo shoots.
See More: How to Choose a Wedding Planner for Your Destination Wedding
There are many lovely destination wedding venues on tropical islands, but El Conquistador is the only one in the Caribbean that boasts a private island that can be used exclusively by wedding couples for their wedding festivities. And since El Conquistador itself is located on the island of Puerto Rico, brides and grooms who choose Palomino Island as their wedding destination are getting married on an island, located off of an island. It makes their destination doubly special.
Another added bonus is the fact that this resort is in Puerto Rico, which means your wedding guests won't need passports for the trip, and they can use U.S. currency for their expenses. Don't forget to check out the off-season rateswhile temperatures in the continental United States become unbearable in the summertime, El Conquistador has stunning views and spectacular breezes on its cliffs year round.
Sandy Malone is the owner of Sandy Malone Weddings & Events and author of How to Plan Your Own Destination Wedding: Do-It-Yourself Tips from an Experienced Professional. Sandy is the star of TLC's reality show Wedding Island , about her destination wedding planning company, Weddings in Vieques .
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This Destination Wedding Venue on a Private Island Is Actually AffordablePromise! - Brides.com
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A Caribbean island or a prime west London flat? Remote 44-acre private hideaway with helipad listed for sale for the … – Homes and Property
Posted: at 12:46 pm
Property prices in London are such that even with 23 million to spare you can still end up with a flat, but how about your own private Caribbean island for the same amount?
Buck Island is a beautiful retreat from the world, fringed with dazzling white coral sandy beaches, but just a minute by boat from Tortola, the largest of the British Virgin Islands, and home to restaurants, museums and plenty of luxury shops.
The island is one of the largest private ones in the Caribbean, covering 44 acres, with cliffs soaring to 100 feet and a sea water pool with its floor covered in coral.
The temperate climate is perfect for all-year round living, with summers from 75F to 90C and winters of 70F to 84F.
The island has an amazing array of accommodation that will let you entertain all your closest friends, while maintaining your privacy.
The interior walls of the main house are clad in natural stone throughout and has a vast family room, a dining room that seats 14, a fully equipped bar area, kitchen, library and two en suite bedrooms, each with open-air showers and balconies.
The crowning glory of the house is a tower with a circular balcony offering 360-degree views of your kingdom and the surrounding seas, while underneath the house is a workout room and spa.
The so-called master villa is next door and includes a 180-degree balcony and even a conference room, while there are also two private villas that only share a kitchen and dining room, while two further guest cottages each have one bedroom and private balconies.
Above it all: the main house hasan infinity pool, with agazebo-covered kitchen, barbecue and dining area under a covered patio(Grenadine Islands Villas)
Should you want to keep some of your guests at arm's length across the water, the property even includes accommodation on Tortola island, 200 yards from Buck Island.
Bar Bay House is a three-bed, three-bath gated home, while the Annex Staff Quarter has four further bedrooms.
One of the main reason for buying a private island is having a beach all to yourself and with all the mod cons you could desire.
Kick back: one of the island's many outdoor living-diningareas(Grenadine Islands Villas)
Buck Island not only has its own beach house with a lounge, dining area, kitchen and four showers to wash away all that sand, but a boat house stacked to the rafters with kayaks, sailing boats and dinghies.
And if you don't fancy swimming or snorkelling in the limpid Caribbean waters, then, of course, there is an infinity pool, with a gazebo that's no ordinary poolside shelter, featuring a kitchen, barbecue and dining area under a covered patio.
Any private island worth its salt also offers ways for plutocrats to use their own transport to reach it and there is not only a helipad but a protected bay that allows superyachts up to 200 feet long to anchor.
Should you ever wish to leave your paradise home for the capital, London is just 13 and half hours away, by connecting flights from Tortola's airport.
Buck Island is for sale with Grenadine Island Villas for $30million
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Meet Trudeau’s new language commissioner A Liberal insider who barely speaks English – The Rebel
Posted: at 12:46 pm
The official languages act is obsolete. Canadians learn French if they have to, and Quebeckers learn English if they have to. The mania over this issue from a generation ago is spent as numbers from Statistics Canada over the past decade confirm.
But the Liberals recently hired a new commissioner of official languages, who gets a massive budget and bureaucracy, and who, if past conduct is any guide, will harass people who dont speak French in places like Vancouver, Calgary and Barrie.
The only purpose for French-English bilingualism in many of these cities is so Liberals can get preferential hiring for government jobs. French-English bilingualism across Canada is a solution without a problem, so naturally, the Liberals love it.
The new Liberal Party bilingualism commissioner has trouble with English. How did that happen?
Well, shes a Liberal.
By her own admission, she met with Trudeaus partisan boss, Gerald Butts about the gig, yet Trudeaus cabinet minister Joly lied about that in Parliament.
Its a government job, not a Liberal Party job but Liberals think they own the government so see the job as a gift to give away to their friends.
Corruption in public office has been around for millennia, which is why we have checks and balances in place so you cant just hire friends or family.
An independent head-hunting firm was tasked with finding the best candidate for this job, and were working on it when they found out from the media that the job had already been filled by Gerald Butts and Trudeaus friend.
We know Justin Trudeaus policies including Official bilingualism, are wrong, but its the law for now and should at least be implemented ethically until its repealed. But, theyre hiring their friends instead of the best people.
Theyre vacationing with billionaires on private islands, and keeping it secret from the ethics commissioner and theyre putting their friends in high office, against the rules.
The Libranos are back!
Next, Howard Levitt, Senior Partner, Levitt, LLP, joins me to explain why he thinks former managing editor of CBCs, The National, should sue the CBC after he was dismissed from his job for being politically incorrect.
Then I speak with John Carpay of Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedom about their legal action against Manitoba Public Insurance over a rejected vanity plate with a Star Trek theme deemed offensive.
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Meet Trudeau's new language commissioner A Liberal insider who barely speaks English - The Rebel
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The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out – lareviewofbooks
Posted: at 12:45 pm
JUNE 3, 2017
IN THE INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY of Twin Oaks, Virginia, co is not merely a prefix for words like coeducation and cooperative. The hundred or so people who live in Twin Oaks, which has operated as an egalitarian commune since 1967, also use co as a pronoun. Co is both gender inclusive used in situations applying to men and women and people who identify as neither as well as gender neutral. As one member wrote, Gender-neutral pronouns can help minimize [] gender assumptions and help others get to know people for other characteristics.
In a community like Twin Oaks, where both work and rewards are shared equally by all, even subtly gendered stereotypes could prove corrosive to a strictly neutral division of labor. Co, then, is more than an artifact of speech. It is an elementary principle, as expressed in Twin Oakss creed: From everyone according to cos abilities, to everyone according to cos needs.
As Nancy Weiss Malkiel argues in Keep the Damned Women Out: The Struggle for Coeducation, the promise embodied in the co of coeducation was considerably more superficial for the elite universities that suddenly began admitting both men and women in the late 1960s and 1970s. Women who enrolled in previously all-male universities found that they were lucky to be given full-length mirrors and better lighting in their restrooms. Concessions to womens preferences or needs in most other areas of life from dining to the curriculum were always begrudging and often elicited both disbelief and indignation. Men could treat almost any adjustment as an injustice, as women found out when a Yale faculty member harangued the new co-eds that they were responsible for the abolition of that most sacred male prerogative: to be able to stroll naked in the gym!
When a reader picks up a book like Malkiels, they expect numerous such anecdotes, instances of entitlement that both disgust and titillate the reader. That is, in a sense, one of the genre conventions of the Ivy League history, although to be strictly accurate, Keep the Damned Women Out is not about coeducation in the Ivies: about 40 percent of its 609 pages (not counting index and notes) are about non-Ivy colleges, and Malkiel only discusses the experiences of four Ivies Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth in any depth. (The other schools covered are Vassar, Smith, and Wellesley in the United States and, across the pond, Oxford and Cambridge.) But so strong is the Ivy undertow that most reviewers have treated the book as a de facto Ivy history, and I will follow suit.
That is just as well, for Malkiel has much to contribute to the ample and sometimes distinguished tradition of books that peel back the Ivy Curtain and reveal the pettiness of privilege. But Keep the Damned Women Out is very different in tone from the jaded memoir-cum-exposs of figures like Walter Kirn, Ross Douthat, William F. Buckley, Dinesh DSouza, or William Deresiewicz. It is more comparable to Jerome Karabels The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton or Craig Steven Wilders Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of Americas Universities, books that have nobly excavated histories of exclusion and exploitation in the nations elite colleges.
Like Karabels or Wilders books, Keep the Damned Women Out tells how gatekeepers addressed the question of who belonged in the Ivy League and who did not. But where those books focused primarily on the efforts of college officials to build up the ramparts of inequality, Malkiel gives us the story of the people who tried to break them down. Her book is, she writes, a case study in leadership as a fundamental element in institutional change. Malkiel, who was formerly a dean of the college at Princeton, bucks long popular and scholarly traditions of casting administrators in the role of reactive and reactionary stand-patters, always trying to slow down progress and outflank dissenters. There is no Dean Wormer from Animal House to be found here.
Malkiel builds her case for these administrators solidly in the endless paper trail of memos and minutes; she demonstrates considerable skill by interpreting much of the coded language and hidden pressures that lay beneath meetings of trustees, admissions staffs, or alumni donors. Malkiels method is exhaustive, tracking almost every movement of the principal administrative players as they debated, listened, cajoled, polled, and planned the issue of whether to go co-ed.
This approach yields an abundance of quotes and anecdotes like the one about Yales gym, but Malkiel is not out to shock the reader. Rather, she presents this evidence of male intransigence and masculine entitlement as proof of the agility of these schools leadership. For almost all these anecdotes are about people outside the administration: the opposition was almost wholly located among alumni, with pockets of students and faculty also acting obnoxiously. The threat of alumni revolts conducted above all through the withholding of donations is a persistent beat felt throughout the book. The question, then, which the book seeks to answer is how these presidents Robert Goheen of Princeton, Nathan Pusey of Harvard, Kingman Brewster of Yale, and John Kemeny of Dartmouth won the acquiescence if not the approval of their schools alumni.
Posed that way, the books ambitions seem rather special or at least specific, but in crediting the efforts of these figures, Malkiel hopes to make a subtler but also more far-reaching point. This is not a story of women banding together to demand opportunity, to press for access, to win rights and privileges previously reserved for men, she writes. Coeducation resulted not from organized efforts by women activists but from strategic decisions taken by powerful men.
Malkiel is not credulous about the motivations of these powerful men. She notes time and again that it was self-interest and pride that drove them first to consider and then implement coeducation. Certain that they were starting to lose some of the best (male) applicants to elite schools like Stanford that already were co-ed, Pusey, Brewster, and Goheen in particular felt obligated to move quickly to maintain their institutions national preeminence by removing that liability. They would add women to their campuses rather as a president today might add a climbing wall, or larger dorm rooms: it would look better in the brochures.
Malkiel doesnt put the matter quite that brutally, but the implication is certainly there. And in that implication, her assertion about the responsibility of powerful men for the coming of coeducation seems to me to take on another meaning. For while as Maggie Doherty has pointed out in The Chronicle of Higher Education Malkiel tends to scant the power of student activism to get administrations to change their ways, her insistence on crediting the men who ran the Ivies with making coeducation happen leaves the responsibility for the shortcomings of coeducation at these universities firmly in the laps of those same powerful men.
Here is where Malkiel demonstrates the tragic and frustrating superficiality of the struggle for coeducation as it was waged and won by powerful men. Malkiel argues forcefully that the all-male schools of the Ivy League were frequently cavalier about undertaking the responsibilities entailed by educating both men and women. All too often, they asked what kind of effect the women might have on their male students, but to women the answer was always an avant la lettre, lean in!
Our approach has not been, Do women need Princeton? but rather, Does the Princeton of the future need women? wrote the author of Princetons influential report on the feasibility of coeducation, Gardner Patterson. What the Patterson Report tried to answer, Malkiel highlights, is whether the presence of women would heighten the value of the educational experience of the students, where students quite obviously meant male students. Women were not equals; they were, at best, honorary men, as one student reminisced, and that honor could easily be rescinded. Women felt at all times that they were there on sufferance, and that they had to prove not just that they belonged but that they were doing something extra to compensate for taking the spot of a hypothetically deserving man. Malkiels sober awareness of the frequent failures of administrations to give equal weight to the pedagogical, emotional, and social needs of the newly admitted women extends to the ways that a lack of administrative resolve of leadership as a fundamental element in institutional change has abetted the persistence of quiet and not-so-quiet biases against women students in the formerly all-male institutions, from traditions of disproportionately rewarding men with the highest honors to the tenacious stereotypes keeping the number of women enrolled in STEM courses low.
But if Malkiel ends the book by considering the short- and long-term effects of coeducation such as it was on women and holds men accountable for not doing more to make the new arrangement work for its women students, the reader receives only tantalizing glimpses of how this experiment affected its female subjects. There are barely any exchanges social or intellectual between women. And while Malkiel does quote from a number of later reminiscences by these pioneer women, they mostly point to but do not really redress the lack of a substantial account of coeducation as a history of women, rather than as a history of institutions and transformative leadership.
To her credit, Malkiel clearly recognizes this paucity of womens dialogues and reflections about coeducation within her book. She delicately allows her sources to address it rather than didactically disavowing responsibility for it the conventional beyond the scope of my study disclaimer. But a passage like the following aches for further exploration, for a sort of historical reversal of its haunting solitude:
Women find no natural mechanisms for becoming close to one another. Perhaps the most important womens complaint is that they spend so much time sorting out their activities with men that they lose a sense of their own directions; and further, when they do begin to move toward their own goals in some independent way, men feel abandoned and threatened.
The Ivy Leagues first women, it turns out, were in need of more than full-length mirrors. Plus a change.
The desire to find out more about the women who first attended these schools leaves the reader feeling both somber and hopeful that another study as ample and ambitious as Malkiels will delve into the records of student organizations and perhaps student records (if they are open for research). But Malkiel makes other choices that left this reader wishing she had either spelled out her assumptions more clearly or taken note of the questions she did not wish to pursue. Three issues stood out to me as needing much more solid answers than the ones Malkiel gives. The first concerns the presumption that the Ivy League is the pacesetter of academic change. Elite institutions, Malkiel writes, are not more important than other institutions, but what happens at elite institutions has an outsized influence on other institutions [] [They] set a tone and provide a model that profoundly influences other[s].
Such a statement in the context of coeducation is curious, to say the least. Certainly, it is notable that so many universities elite and not moved in the late 1960s and early to mid-1970s to erase various forms of sex segregation in practices ranging from admission to housing assignments. Furthermore, Malkiel demonstrates clearly that research undertaken by the Ivies, particularly by Princeton, aided administrators at other universities who were trying to decrease forms of sex segregation. But when the history of mixed-gender higher education in the United States dates back to before the Civil War, does it make sense to call the Ivies leaders or laggards?
Moreover, while Malkiel addresses the broader social context that surrounded the debates over coeducation in a chapter named Setting the Stage: The Turbulent 1960s, her account is truncated. The unfinished assimilation of Jews and Catholics on these WASP campuses is apparent from allusions scattered through the book, and while Malkiel does not draw the threads into any kind of conclusion, an attentive reader will note how often (male) student leaders agitating for coeducation had typically Jewish names. The Yale Hillel, which was still fairly new in 1968, helped to welcome women during a sort of trial run for coeducation in that year by offering a bagel and lox breakfast.
Race was never disconnected from coeducation in the minds of many alumni who opposed changes to the student body, and Malkiel could have done more to connect the two in her account. You cant very well get rid of those already admitted, wrote one Yale alumnus in 1970, but for Gods sake dont admit any more blacks or coeds. While alumni saw these two forms of desegregation as two parts of one whole, Malkiel doesnt inquire if that view was shared by anyone else. It would be especially interesting to know, for instance, if some of those pioneer women who broke the gender barrier at Yale or Dartmouth took for their own historical model not Mrs. Daniel Boone entering the Cumberland Gap but James Meredith enrolling at the University of Mississippi. Malkiels choice to treat coeducation as a discrete development in higher education concentrated among elite schools at the end of the 1960s is particularly frustrating at this point: as soon as we see coeducation as, instead, part of a broader and longer movement toward desegregation starting with the racial integration of the military in 1948, new vistas open and the Ivy League once again looks like a latecomer, not an innovator.
While Harvard might quiver in irritation at thinking that it was, in some way, responding to changes originating in the Deep South or the outer boroughs, it is more accurate to see the Ivies decision to go co-ed as nearing the end of desegregation than as leading a new venture in diversity. That is not to say that the question of why so many elite institutions were simultaneously wrestling with the issue of coeducation and why so many decided in favor isnt important on its own. But the narrative is shaped differently if we imagine Brewster, Goheen, and others belatedly giving in to a broad consensus that coeducation was normal rather than forging a new ideal that coeducation was the future.
The second issue that needed more consideration was the place of queerness on these campuses both before and after coeducation. While Malkiel makes an effort to acknowledge the impact of the Civil Rights movement on student consciousness, there is no real presence in the book for the percolating gay rights movement of that historical moment, or, indeed, for queer life at all. With so many lines redrawn and roles destabilized, the latent queerness of the process of gender desegregation would seem to be at least a necessary subtext. Many people would have identified with the sentiments of either of the two cartoons Malkiel includes in the book. CONFUSED of course, Im confused! a father shouts in the first. I have a son at Vassar and a daughter at Yale! In the second cartoon, we find two women chatting (or flirting?) at a cocktail party: Princeton, did you say? How interesting. Im a Yale man myself.
The situations entailed by the novelty of coeducation were quite obviously ripe for such gender confusion. But one also wonders if some of the anger and resentment at the intrusion of co-eds into what Dartmouth men called the masculine heaven of Hanover was due to the changes it forced upon the casual homoeroticism of the locker room and fraternity. Even the small number of women who were admitted to these previously all-male institutions necessitated the rewriting of formal rules governing interactions between men. They must certainly have rewritten less formal ones as well.
From time to time, Malkiel provides evidence that administrators did see coeducation as an opportunity to redraft the sexual codes of their campus, although she appears reluctant to parse what mostly appears to be coded language. Much of the administrators concerns, however, seem to have been not about homoerotic play but rather about sexual assault and date rape. The debauchery of the weekends when Ivy League men brought girls back to their campuses was legendary: one thinks of Dorothy Parkers quip about the Yale prom that if all the girls attending it were laid end to end, I wouldnt be a bit surprised. But other artifacts of this culture of weekend revelry luxuriated in the element of coercion which accompanied these dates: Dartmouths in town again / Run, girls, run went one well-known drinking song.
Given the different standards he would have had regarding consensual sex, it is difficult to know for sure what Yales Kingman Brewster had in mind when he made the following comment:
The social and moral value of having two thousand college girls of outstanding intellectual and personal qualifications resident in New Haven is apparent [] The crash week-end, the degrading form of social activity known as the Mixer, have been [] a most unhealthy and unnatural part of the four Yale undergraduate years. Such an environment is not conducive to the development of a considerate, mature, and normal relationship among the sexes.
Less ambiguous, however, was the fact that one of the changes made to the physical plant to adjust to the arrival of women undergraduates was to augment campus lighting and install locks on doors.
But it was the crass opposition to coeducation at Princeton that reveals how much sex was on peoples minds when it came to coeducation. One Princeton alumnus wrote (in a letter that actually appeared in the Princeton Alumni Weekly), a good old-fashioned whorehouse would be considerably more efficient and much, much cheaper. Such a remark, while crude, was representative of one objection to coeducation: having sex or scheming to have it would consume the whole attention of Princeton men once they had access to women at all hours. The Patterson report addressed this belief head on. It was not true, the report read, that men would use the women undergraduates for their social and sexual convenience. Instead, the only reason Princeton men seemed so priapic was because of the unnaturalness of the weekend hunt for dates. The presence of women would stabilize rather than inflame their libidos.
Men at both Princeton and Yale believed that the presence of women would civilize men. When Princeton repeated Yales experiment with hosting women for one week as a trial run for coeducation, The Daily Princetonian wrote that For one week Princeton was a more humane place to go to school [] The whole campus seemed more natural. Men on their own or with limited access to women were animals; with women, they were humane.
Making humans more humane is not the particular responsibility of anyone, or of any gender, because it is or should be the mission of everyone, of all gender identities. It has often, however, been a role taken on energetically if not always consistently by higher education: the humanities, after all, is generally one of the divisions of a university for a reason.
And that is where we might return to the example of Twin Oaks, Virginia, and its experiments in equality in language and in everyday life, in making humaneness or mere humanity the responsibility of everyco.
Twin Oaks is known as an intentional community because it is a place where people voluntarily come together to live according to a shared set of principles. But we might equally acknowledge that universities are intentional communities as much as communes are. Universities are, from one point of view, the most successful utopian projects ever created, even if they do not feel like utopias much of the time. Much as has been the case for other utopian communities from Brook Farm to the Soviet Union, the failures which we find difficult to explain are often chalked up to human nature thats just the way people are: acquisitive, lustful, cruel, or fearful.
Keep the Damned Women Out is clear in laying the blame for coeducations limited progress toward true equality at the doors of the men who never fully committed to remaking their institutions into schools and homes for women as well as men. But in some ways, it accepts that failure as a product of the nature of these schools and perhaps even a product of the nature of men. It could hardly have been otherwise, Malkiel seems to say, you can see what they were working with.
And perhaps that is true; perhaps it is even fair. But the purpose of critique is not just to weigh what was plausible but to project back into the past the seeds of a better present, to imagine what would have been necessary then to make a better now. To do that, we cannot lean on clichs about human nature or about the characters of particular institutions: the limits our subjects believed in for their own actions cannot be our limits for the imagination of what could have been.
Coeducation at the Ivies, Malkiel demonstrates, was not a utopian project but a pragmatic acquiescence to necessity and self-interest. Yet that does not mean that further work in the name of coeducation must be pragmatic, that the co in coeducation must mean only with a few (more) women or with a few trans* or genderqueer persons now added. Bare inclusion not equality was the paltry goal of the administrators whose story Malkiel tells. It need not be ours as well.
Andrew Seal received his PhD from Yale University in 2017. He is a regular blogger at the Society forUS Intellectual Historyand his work has appeared in TheChronicle of Higher Education,n+1, Dissent, andIn These Times.
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Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild’s 50 years – Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog)
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The Rochester Folk Art Guild attains a milestone accomplishment this year, as the group celebrates 50 years as a vibrant and creative crafts community.
The first seven members put down roots on East Hill, Middlesex in 1967. Since that time, hundreds of people have spent time at East Hill Farm, helping the Guild grow and develop into an exceptional school for crafts, and one of the most successful and long-lasting intentional communities in the country.
The Guilds fine pottery, woodworking, weaving, and other handcrafts have found their way around the world into museums, galleries, and private collections, even appearing on the table at the White House on different occasions.
The half-century marks a special point in the Guilds history, and the members are extending a warm welcome to all in the local communities to come share in a day of celebration, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 10.
There will be tours of the studios and East Hill Gallery, chamber music by Ensemble Resonance, and free, light refreshments for all.
Ensemble Resonance is flute, bassoon, and piano, and the three will play Mozart, Nino Rota, and Taylor-Coleridge at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.
We are thankful to have great supporters, as well as wonderful neighbors in Middlesex and the surrounding Finger Lakes communities, says Guild spokesperson David Barnet.
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Lawmakers: listen before you legislate – Seattle Times
Posted: at 12:45 pm
Far too often key policies and decisions are made without considering input from the communities that are directly affected. Key decision-makers and subject-matter experts often assume that they know whats best for a community and that they can make equitable decisions for them.
However, if policies are to be truly equitable, the affected communities need to have their voices heard at the forefront of the policymaking process. Not only does the community voice need to be heard, but government entities need to be intentional in how communities are engaged so that all community voices are represented. There must be intentional action taken to include those disenfranchised and underrepresent communities that do not have high representation in traditional public forums, which are typically used to influence policy decisions.
By listening to the needs of the affected communities first, policies can be more inclusive and effective at dealing with real problems rather than wasting public funds on unnecessary programs or policies that dont address the real barriers communities face.
Katia Garcia, Shoreline
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NASA May Build GPS for Space Travel – VOA News – Voice of America
Posted: at 12:45 pm
NASA May Build GPS for Space Travel - VOA News Voice of America Today's travelers on land, sea and air rely on one of the satellite-based navigational systems commonly known as GPS, where the G stands for Global. Scientists ... |
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Tomorrow, SpaceX Will Forever Transform Spaceflight – Futurism
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Why Is This Dragon Special?
Tomorrow (June 1, 2017) will be a landmark date for commercial space travel. SpaceX is set to become the first privately owned company to perform multiple orbital flights to space using the same aircraft. On 21st September 2014, using the Falcon 9 rocket, this same Dragon CRS-4 delivered 2.5 tons of cargo to the International Space Station (ISS).
Since, this time,it has been refurbished. The launch window for its second cargo flight opens at 5:55pm ET, and when it happens, this launch will transform humanitys future in spacethusting us into an age where space is accessible to every individual, not just nations.
CRS-4 Dragon About to Land. Image Credit: SpaceX, Wikimedia
To break down the significance further, it is one of only a handful of previous multi-orbit space flights and all of the others were undertaken by governments. They include: the NASA orbiters Atlantis, Challenger, Columbia, Discovery, and Endeavour, which made dozens of missions but were hideously expensive to repair. There was alsothe X-37B, which Boeing built under commission by the U.S Air Force, and the Soviet VA spacecraft, which only orbited the Earth once on its second voyage.
While it is unclear how much the Dragon CRS-4 has had to be repaired, and exactly how much it cost, the savings are expected to be considerable, which will play a major role in making space both commercially available and also affordable. However, even taking financial considerations out of the equation, this is nonetheless a landmark in breaching the final frontier,as private individuals are truly entering the space race.
Yet,ultimately, SpaceX is about far more than just making spaceflight affordable. SpaceX started with the ultimate goal of enabling people to live on other planets the first planet Musks space company aims to colonize is Mars. In order to do so, Musk plans to build the BFR . This stands for, in his own words, the Big F*cking Rocket, which will ferry the reusable Mars Colonial Transporter to the Red Planet.
He has stated previously that he plans to put the first person on Mars by 2025. A test launch of the Falcon Heavy, the rocket that bridges the gap between the Falcon 9 and the BFR was recently completed, and its first full launch is planned for sometime this summer.
Musk argues that humanity reaching Mars and other planets is pivotal. As he stated in an interview with aeon: I think there is a strong humanitarian argument for making life multi-planetary, and that this has to start with Mars because, if we can establish a Mars colony, we can almost certainly colonise the whole Solar System, because well have created a strong economic forcing function for the improvement of space travel.
The process, though, has to move in gradations and this relaunch of the Dragon is a major milestone in Musks plan.
At the Wall Street Journals D: All Things Digital Conferencein 2013, Musk explained his feelings regarding the importance of reaching other worlds, stating,Either we spread Earth to other planets, or we risk going extinct. An extinction event is inevitable and were increasingly doing ourselves in. The goal is to improve rocket technology and space technology until we can send people to Mars and establish life on Mars.
Of course, this will be no simple task. Mars is, currently, a wasteland of dirt and sand.
Mars is a fixer-upper of a planet, Musk said. But we could make it work. And honestly, even if we cant make it work, it seems that we have no real choice but to try. Musk concludes, I agree this is an unlikely outcome, but if we dont keep improving technology every year, we wont get there.
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