News:

Welcome to the new (and now only) Fora!

Main Menu

Recent posts

#11
Add a little class to the occasion.  Play the a video of Gaudeamus Igitur to class the place up and let them learn something about their forebears in the classroom in the distant past.
#12
General Discussion / Re: What Have You Read Lately?...
Last post by apl68 - Today at 07:55:04 AM
Shotguns and Stagecoaches:  The Brave Men Who Rode for Wells Fargo in the Wild West, by John Boessenecker.  Profiles a number of the detectives and shotgun messengers who defended shipments of precious metals and cash on the stagecoaches and trains of the old days against road agents and train robbers.  It's old-fashioned Hollywood western cliche that was largely based on real life.  There really were numerous attempted holdups of coaches and trains in the 1800s.  And beyond--there was an attempted old-style train robbery as late as 1912!  When The Great Train Robbery, usually regarded as the first western movie, was made in 1903, it wasn't a period piece.  It was "ripped from today's headlines" material.

Lots of exciting true stories recounted here.  Many of them do read like movie scenarios.  Some of them have inspired scenes in actual movies.  Some are more far-out than anything a movie would have tried to get away with back in the day. 

Yes, it's all very exciting and colorful.  And should make us glad that the Old West is in the past.  It was a harsh and often brutal time that we would do well not to be too nostalgic about.
#13
The State of Higher Ed / Re: DEI programs in the news
Last post by apl68 - Today at 07:35:32 AM
Yes, we need some correction there.  Wish it wasn't as brute-force as what we're seeing in places like Texas, but that's what happens when politics gets involved.
#14
To think that Alice Cooper is now getting the old fogy vote.  Sic transit gloria mundi.
#15
Teaching / Re: Missing work due to religi...
Last post by apl68 - Today at 07:27:20 AM
Quote from: Hibush on May 08, 2024, 02:53:08 PMThe spirituality office sends out a long list of religious holidays in case we want to be prepared. I think most faculty just see that the list is long and trying to schedule around them is futile.

Your institution has a "spirituality office?"  The faculty's attitude to their no doubt well-meaning list of religious holidays is probably pretty typical of the response to a lot of what these sorts of offices put out. 
#16
General Discussion / Re: The Post For Stuff You Wan...
Last post by apl68 - Today at 07:22:19 AM
Congratulations on both the grants and the team, Puget!
#17
IHE: UC Berkeley Investigates Pro-Palestinian Dinner Protest Fracas

QuoteThe Council on American-Islamic Relations shared on X a video showing Fisk coming up behind Afaneh, grabbing the phone in her hand from which she was reading the speech, putting her arm around Afaneh's shoulder and saying, "Leave, this is not your house, it is my house." Chemerinksy also says "Please leave our house." Fisk then tries to pull Afaneh's microphone out of her hands. Afaneh says UC is funding weapons manufacturers and Fisk, relinquishing the mic, says "I have nothing to do with what the UC does."
#19
General Discussion / Re: NYT Spelling Bee
Last post by ab_grp - Today at 06:53:09 AM
Good morning!

A bit past genius with pangram so far.  Yesterday we had team QB.  I think I was missing mirin.

I had the schmofficial perching-gauzy.

Happy solving!
#20
Quote from: Langue_doc on Today at 04:50:19 AM
QuoteMaintenance workers had a firsthand view of how protesters seized the building, and wondered why the university failed to stop it.

Some paragraphs from the article:
QuoteMariano Torres, a maintenance worker at Columbia University, was cleaning on the third floor of Hamilton Hall in his signature Yankees cap one night last week, when he heard a commotion downstairs. He said he figured it had something to do with the pro-Palestinian encampment on the lawn outside and kept working.

He was shocked, he said, when he suddenly saw five or six protesters, their faces covered by scarves or masks, picking up chairs and bringing them into the stairway.

"I'm like, what the hell is going on? Put it back. What are you doing?" he recalled.

He said he tried to block them and they tried to reason with him to get out of the way, telling him "this is bigger than you." One person, he recalled, told him he didn't get paid enough to deal with this. Someone tried to offer him "a fistful of cash."

He said he replied: "I don't want your money, dude. Just get out of the building."

It was the beginning of what would be a frightening time for Mr. Torres, who goes by Mario, and two other maintenance workers in Hamilton Hall, who were inside when pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia took over the building.

Just as upsetting as their encounters with the protesters, the three workers recounted in interviews this week, was their feeling that the university had not done enough to prevent the attack or to help them once the building was under siege.

QuoteThe sole public safety officer in the lobby left when confronted by the occupiers and called for backup, several witness said. The protesters then quickly began barricading the main doors with furniture and chains. The occupiers appear to have timed their break-in with the midnight shift change, and the woman on duty was coming off her shift, the union said.

Mr. Torres, who had worked there for five years, confronted some of the protesters, trying to protect what he saw as "his building."

But as he saw the number of protesters grow to "maybe 15 or 20," he said, he realized he could not fight them. He asked to be let out, but someone said the doors downstairs were already barricaded and that he couldn't leave.

He thought of his two young sons at home. He had no idea if other buildings were being taken over, too. Fear made him "crazy," he said. He grabbed an older protester and ripped off his sweatshirt and mask, demanding to be let out.

The man said he could bring 20 people up to back him. "I was terrified," Mr. Torres said. "I did what I had to do." Mr. Torres then grabbed a nearby fire extinguisher and pulled the pin before someone persuaded him to calm down.

Mr. Wilson, 47, saw Mr. Torres facing off with protesters in the stairwell. He radioed his supervisors for help. Then he made his way down to the main doors. They were fastened shut with zip ties.

"So I begged them," Mr. Wilson said. "I said, I work here, let me out, let me out." Eventually, someone cut the zip ties and pushed him outside, he said, then secured the doors again. He found the public safety officer and told her that his co-workers were stuck inside.



Wouldn't that count as forcible confinement? Ironic for the pro-Hamas protesters to resort to kidnapping to support "freedom" for people in Gaza.