Category: Blog Post

A Non-Political Case for Western Civ

My letter to the editor was published today in the Wall Street Journal in which I argue that the rationale for requiring Western Civ courses for college undergraduates should not be coupled with political conservatism. The reasons are not entirely pragmatic: of course, there needs to be an argument for teaching Western Civ that doesn’t require professors to register for the Republican Party. But even at Columbia, where the faculty is bluer than blue, the faculty support this strict Core Curriculum.

Politics never needed to be tied to curriculum, and pretending like they must go hand-in-hand doesn’t promote dialogue among academics.

A Marathon Has No Home Team

boston-marathon-woman-580.jpg

I don’t remember much of the last few miles of the Boston Marathon. I ran it in 2006, and around mile 23, I entered some bizarro nirvana, a meditative mix of exhaustion and pain. After so many hypnotizing thumps of your own feet, things become fuzzy.

But I do remember running around the corner toward Copley Square and physically feeling the cheers and applause of throngs of students, families, and gruff Irishmen from Southie. These weren’t familiar friends or relatives cheering for me and the thousands of other runners. These spectators, these strangers, cheered for hours to celebrate the accomplishments of runners whom they had never and probably never did meet.

Maybe it’s because everyone knows that man or woman in the neighborhood who wakes up before dawn to get those miles in. You see that neighbor in every runner. Every Kenyan, every Mexican, every Korean runner becomes a neighbor.

You don’t cheer for the “home team” at a marathon. You cheer for humans. All of them.

Today’s bombing at the finish line of the Boston Marathon is an affront to that spirit of universal goodwill. It’s not just an attack on an event or a city or a country. It’s an attack on our cheering for each other, on whatever race course we find ourselves. It’s an attack on that sincere, rare celebration of the neighbors we never realized we had.

(Photo by Alex Trautwig/Getty)

Snake (a word study)

I recently learned that “snake” is derived from “sneak.” As in “Snakes sneak into skinny nooks to scan for snacks.”

This discovery reminded me a great haiku by my friend Nitin:

Eternal Love Song

The word cicada
comes from Latin: cicada,
which means “cicada.”