Thu 24 Apr 2008
Not sure I like the capitalization but here is williamsSpeaksUp:
To advance cultural understanding and community engagement, Williams has established a Web site on which campus members can report and share incidents of unwanted, abusive, or harassing behavior. Over time, it will develop into a historical record, as a resource for dialog and education on issues of inclusion. Each submission is reviewed for authenticity by a group made up of * The Dean of the College * The Vice President for Strategic Planning and Institutional Diversity * The Minority Coalition Co-chairs and one representative each from * College Council * Campus Safety and Security * Junior Advisors Anyone can submit an incident for review, but only members of the campus community (students, faculty, and staff) can access postings. The postings will be anonymous, though the identity of each poster must be known by the review group to verify authenticity.
Regular readers expect an old reactionary like me to mock this idea, to draw analogies to the Star Chamber or self-criticism during the Cultural Revolution. Not today! Suggestions and comments below: 1) I think that this is basically a good idea, but I worry about the implementation details and the ideological priors of those in charge. Note that I am “talking my own book,” as we say in finance, since I proposed a version of this plan three years ago (and in February).
There should be chapter in the [Diversity Initiatives] report, perhaps in the Context section, about the history of diversity issues at Williams. This would be wonderfully informative as well as serving to set the stage for the analysis that follows. It is very hard to have an informed opinion about the issues involved with diversity unless one knows the history. Although it is always interesting to hear about older controversies — the exclusion of certain types of Ephs from fraternities in the 1950’s, say — I am much more interested in the last 35 years or so. So, give us 5 or so pages about every significant diversity-related event from the takeover of Hopkins Hall through Nigaleian. Recent examples from what should be included would be Barnard/VISTA, the KKK cookout and Madcow. Quote the original materials. Reprint articles from the Record, both news and opinion pieces. Interview the participants. Tell us the history. Williams can’t move forward unless it knows where it has been.
True today as it was then. If you want to have an informed discussion of these issues, you need to start with the facts. You need to gather information and testimony. You need to present everything publicly. You need to be transparent. All of this connects quite naturally to my Eph Style Guide and my proposal to post pictures of obnoxious behavior. You may think that all of these are bad ideas. I mention them now both because they are relevant to the discussion and because they demonstrate my fundamental agreement with Professor Wendy Raymond, VP Mike Reed and others: It is possible for Williams as a community to work together to make the College a better, more welcoming and more intelligent community. Yes, we can!
2) The concern, obviously, is that what I want — objective, neutral, thorough reporting and information — is not what WilliamsSpeaksUp [WSU?] is going to provide. Consider this Record article. Are we interested in “bias offenses” or “discrimination” or “offensive behavior.” These categories overlap, of course, but it would be good to be clear about what is and is not to be included. Specifically, must there be a racial/sexual element to the offense or will any violation of community standards be recorded? I favor the latter, but WSU should decide and make clear its plan.
3) Think that only a crazed wingnut would be concerned about the ideology behind WSU? Think again! Consider the collection of “incident reports” that WSU has already published. All of these are, allegedly, examples of “unwanted, abusive, or harassing behavior.” And some clearly are! But what about Oren Cass’s ‘05 Record op-ed on “The Diversity Addiction,” which argues that the History department offers too many diversity-related courses. I have no doubt that many members of the Williams community were offended by this article, but there can be no doubt that it expresses a reasonable point of view, one shared by many students and alumni. If WSU thinks that op-eds like Cass’s are “abusive” and, therefore, violations of the community standards, then we have a problem.
4) Procedure matters. I do not think that anonymous reports will be useful. Anything that is worth investigating and recording will require direct testimony. The number of Ephs who refused to go on record because of this requirement will be very small so few examples will be lost. Anonymous accusations are not credible enough to matter.
5) Since my application is teach a Winter Study in 2009 has not been approved, I should try to be on my very best behavior. But stuff like this is a challenge! Beware “The EphBlog!”
Summary: Recording and discussing what happens at Williams is a good idea but the devil is in the ideology of those doing the recording. If WSU can, in the best traditions of Williams, play things straight, it will make a valuable contribution to the Williams community.
[Is "play things straight" homophobic? -- ed. You know where to report me!]
To advance cultural understanding and community engagement, Williams has established a Web site on which campus members can report and share incidents of unwanted, abusive, or harassing behavior. Over time, it will develop into a historical record, as a resource for dialog and education on issues of inclusion. Each submission is reviewed for authenticity by a group made up of * The Dean of the College * The Vice President for Strategic Planning and Institutional Diversity * The Minority Coalition Co-chairs and one representative each from * College Council * Campus Safety and Security * Junior Advisors Anyone can submit an incident for review, but only members of the campus community (students, faculty, and staff) can access postings. The postings will be anonymous, though the identity of each poster must be known by the review group to verify authenticity.
April 24th, 2008 at 8:43 am
Back in 1955 in collaberation with the College Cal King, then owner of the package store on the site identically now occupied by West’s on Spring Steet, abusively declined to sell me a six pack during a time when the Massachusetts Alcoholic Beverage Commission was in town for one of its periodic visits. He agistly humiliated me, hurt my feelings and frustrated my thirst (additionally I always suspected that he looked down on my style of dress) - forcing me to go all the way to New York State (where the legal age was 18) for my beverage shopping. When am I going to hear from the Dean with her sympathy for my 53 years of distress - my tender sensibilities have been suffering all this time without remedy?
April 24th, 2008 at 9:43 am
FU -
You are also owed an apology for being forced to increase your carbon foot print. Imagine!
Thank you for the morning chuckle.
By the way, I’d like to hear more about various jurisdictions having different age requirements. I take it that NY was 18 and MA was 21 (?) (or was it graduated, with one age for beer and another for the hard stuff?). What was the age in VT? Did MA Staties stop and search cars at the border? Did you guys know back roads? Did the age difference have a big impact? Did the MA age limit have anything to do with people indulging in creations like the milk punch Dick taught us about? I would be very interested in hearing anecdotes from your era.
Dick -
Surely you have some contributions in this vein.
DK-
Perhaps if you were “on good behavior” all the time, you would get further with your requests to teach at Williams. Build a track record, you know (creating a record of being a “bad boy” until you apply for a slot, trying to clean it up while the application is pending, and then reverting may not be advancing your cause). Just a thought.
April 24th, 2008 at 10:04 am
David, your comparisons to Communist China may be seen by some students as potentially offensive, and this kind of criticism is just another form of privileged white male violence against the underclass. Please report yourself to Hopkins Hall (3rd floor) immediately.
Snark aside, this could be a fascinating public art project, sort of similar to what Professor Eva Grudin accomplished in Vienna:
http://www.tocounteract.com/
April 24th, 2008 at 1:43 pm
In the 50s the drinking age was 21 in MA and VT - 18 in NY - no distinction relative to beer, wine or hard liquor - bars, restaurants and package stores readily sold to college kids of any apparent age (with the law and the College turning a blind eye) except in MA when the reps for the Alcoholic Beverage Commission were “in town”, the age limit was stricly enforced - and the purveyors always knew in advance when that might be. Closing time in MA was 1:00 am (except on Saturday nights when it was midnight) - in NY it was 3:00 am (resulting in a flow of drinkers from MA to NY about midnight) - as I recall, in VT it was 1:00 am.
April 24th, 2008 at 2:33 pm
But you didn’t have to go anywhere — unless the ABC people were in town — because you could buy it and keep it in your fraternity house? And Security never walked through?
What a different world.
Bring back … the 18-year old drinking age.
April 24th, 2008 at 4:34 pm
As I understand it, teen deaths from motor vehicle deaths are way down with the 21 year old drinking age. So, keep in mind that these issues are not all black and white.
April 24th, 2008 at 4:57 pm
Co-education brings Williams motor vehicle deaths down by obviating road-tripping.
April 24th, 2008 at 5:10 pm
“Bring back … the 18-year old drinking age.”
That was facetious and meant to be a riff on FU’s “Bring back you-know-what” chorus. We (or certainly I) seem to be having difficulties with tone today.
I happen to believe that the issues raised by drinking ages, societal attitudes towards alcohol consumption (including the subset of campus attitudes), and actual drinking practices on today’s campuses are extremely complex. I did not mean to reopen that — already overworked — can of worms on this forum with my poor attempt at a joke.
I will say that, when I was younger, hardly anyone seems to have taken the dangers of drinking and driving seriously; that has changed, and I am very, very glad of it. I don’t know what funerals I did not have to attend, but I am very clear that some of them would have been quite close to me, especially as we have alcoholism in the family. Enough said.
April 24th, 2008 at 5:12 pm
FU - We cross-posted. Despite having said, “Enough said,” I would agree with you.
April 26th, 2008 at 10:58 am
We should lower the drinking age to 17 for all members of the armed forces… including those in ROTC… beer and wine, in bars only. Good way to control distribution… and to give those who are risking so much today… the right to have a few beers.
Been away for a while… one day… this townie shall return!
April 26th, 2008 at 11:24 am
ptc -
“Been away for a while… one day… this townie shall return!”
Hurry back while you can still recognize it.
With your long association with the town, you might have some suggestions on the Purple Pub thread we’ve been working on.
Safe home…and may it be soon.