Sweet Briar College to Close? Quit? Cowards!

Paul G. Rice, Board chair, said in an interview that he realized some would ask, “Why don’t you keep going until the lights go out?”

But he said that doing so would be wrong. “We have moral and legal obligations to our students and faculties and to our staff and to our alumnae. If you take up this decision too late, you won’t be able to meet those obligations,” he said. “People will carve up what’s left — it will not be orderly, nor fair.”

This tragedy is not a result of “trend lines” or changing cultural mores, it is a direct result of the lack of fortitude  all too often associated with “progressive” educators, too proud to ask for help, too guilt ridden to admit their failure; paralyzed by angst, they do exactly what all narcissists do, they quit.

President James F. Jones, Jr. can make all the excuses he feels justifies his and the Board’s decision, but only cowards quit. If it isn’t easy, quit. Why fight against the inevitable? If no one will come to our rescue, quit. If the government won’t help us, quit. If our student recruitment programs don’t work, quit. If the odds aren’t in our favor, quit. If it requires, energy, dedication, perseverance, the will to overcome all obstacles, quit. And for Goodness sakes, if the nearest Starbucks is 30 minutes away, quit. (Better yet, get thee a Starbucks franchise! A better man would!)

Thank God this progressive cowardliness did not exist in Eighteenth Century America. We’d all be very different.

Sweet Briar College has a wonderful reputation, an idyllic location, an enriching curriculum, and should “market” itself aggressively to the tens of thousands of bright minds seeking just a little more than a “bidness” degree, or learning to write “code,” or even study the human genome, as worthy an endeavor as that may be.

I grew up reading, as early as third grade, from Mortimer Adler’s list of “Great Books,” I attended a preparatory high school, and had a dalliance with several of America’s finest “liberal arts” schools, I even attended the University of Georgia when the “liberal arts” scene in Athens included classroom and course work, not the soon arriving wretched, wrenching, warbling of imitators of Bob Dylan’s funereal folk songs, or later, the beer soaked, pot toked, guitar stroked, guilt poked cacophonous cretinism of the Athens music scene.

The need of intellectuals is to contemplate, to review, to gather together disparate ideas and dissonance theories, and to think, think, think… I did so in the Quad at Georgia, lying out upon the sweet grasses, beneath towering fragrant Magnolias and orb shaped “American” Ilex Opaca, reclining in thought before the vestibules of the Antebellum and Victorian buildings which enclosed that sacred space. I wore my usual wheat hued khaki Levis and a grey sweat shirt decorated with a silk screened image of Beethoven ( yes ladies, that was I) and I refused to join ROTC, for good reason, and one damp day, early in the Fall Quarter, caught in a fierce rain shower under the spread of an ancient Oak which had been growing at the corner of S. Lumpkin Street and Baldwin Street for a century or more, I was joined in the protective shade of its many thick boughs, layered with rustling dying drying leaves, by a incipient Bulldog hero, Preston Ridlehuber.

Who can forget the victory in the Sun Bowl? Who can fail to remember our hero’s part in that tale, on a day when Erk Russell’s later to be named “Junk Yard Dog” defense stunted the attack of the vaunted All American running back Donnie Anderson, and Ridlehuber’s outstanding quarterback play led the novice Head Coach of Georgia, Vince Dooley, to his first bowl win!

There was I, standing in addled admiration of Ridlehuber, thinking of what I might say, when he, staring directly at me, addressed me:

“What kind of nut are you?”

His attitude, his profound misunderstanding of my motives, his profound shock when confronted by someone of a different culture, his athletic, he a frat boy; mine intellectual, a patron of the liberal arts,  provides the underpinning of my final comments:

I completely understood “from where he was coming,” and who he was; he, alas, had not a clue about who I was. He remains a hero of mine, perhaps a less glittery one, and I remain a Bulldog to this day, despite being asked to leave the University by the venerable and most honorable Dean Tate. This tale illustrates why every Liberal Arts College is sacrosanct, and why the loss of one is a “modern” tragedy. Where are bright minds to go, what academic garden exists where time slows, words are read and felt, and thoughts, original thoughts, evolve but in small Liberal Arts colleges and universities? Yes, you can forget Harvard and Yale, those bastions of EuroAmerican social philosophy haven’t produced an original thought since the 1930’s!

But to assume that a scholar, an academic, a progressive administrator can be, should be, entrusted with leadership of such a school as Sweet Briar College, well, in a word… or two… that’s just plain folly! While I treasure the liberal arts college concept, and trust it to produce “thinkers” far more often than universities many times their size, the flaw here is that thinkers are most often cowards, or lazy, or shy, or eccentric, or neurotic, and none of these attributes bode well for developing the marketing analysis and strategic recruitment planning necessary to attract and retain students who suffer from a need to read, a delight in gathering facts, assembling them into workable theories, and then, thinking deeply upon them.

Intellectual ideas, political ideas are all, in our culture, subservient to economic ideas, to competitive capitalism. Knowledge without a cost effective purpose is cheaply crafted, literacy is impoverished and fast thumbs, sound bites and glib comments decorate the surface of an entertained and ensnaring culture sphere. There is nothing below the surface, and few are left to ask why.

Clearly, Mr. Rice, you are common stuff, a small and little man, for when any being claiming to be sentient, uses in an argument, or even blurts out, in the muddled street jargon of “modern “America, the word “fair,” in any context other than a statement about a Street, Country or State “Fair,” it is obvious that the being so speaking is a dimwit, a nimrod, a neanderthal, certainly not an intellectual.  Which, in this case, actually explains your callous and cowardly behavior; consider this, wise men seek justice not “fairness,” seek always to become just, a quantifiable phenomena, not judging by the vacuous vulgarities and vagaries of “fairness,” but by reasoning and logic, and evaluating fact, or as I like to opine,  “I’d rather ride a horse than a unicorn, n’est pas?”

 

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Bernie Manning Sullivan July 12, 1920 – February 24, 2015

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My mother, Bernie Manning Sullivan passed away yesterday afternoon, February 24, 2015. May God have mercy on her soul.

My Sermon and Eulogy:

She, Lt. Bernie Manning, 803 MAETS, USAAF, WWII CBI Theater, joins history along with millions of others who have been called America’s “Greatest Generation.” Their souls now soaring heaven-bound, their work of saving mankind from itself nearly finished, we’ll remember them well, with respect and pride. They defended the Four Freedoms and our Constitution on battlefields across the Globe, and having defeated tyrants and monsters, they gave hope and structure to a nascent world community, and went to work rebuilding not only their own lives, but those of millions left homeless and destitute in Europe and Asia.

They came home, with relief and happiness, to waiting mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters, friends and neighbors, their  joyous reunions tempered by the tears they wept as they saw tens of thousands of Gold Stars hung in windows through-out our great nation.

My mother lived ninety four years, and accomplished many personal achievements, but she should be best remembered as “just” one of millions who answered the call to save America, to save Democracy, to preserve a way of life that allowed her, and my father, and again millions of other men and woman, to reach higher peaks than their parents, to dream bigger dreams, to build homes and schools and a nourishing culture, to embrace children living, and bring into the world a decade of infants who now have lived longer and richer lives than any generation that came before.

My mother “kept the faith” and through-out her life inspired many young women to achieve what they feared was unattainable, to gain what seemed unreachable, even serving, in her last years, to help and encourage one bright young mother to do the work and achieve the dream of graduating with a degree in law, just as my mother had done some 50 years before.

As I read the Order of Evening Prayer with her Saturday, just hours before her final, fatal attack, after the passing of several weeks since she had major surgery, I held her hand as we prayed. Her speech was slurred, and her voice weak and hushed, but her lips moved and formed the faint words of response, and joined mine in the recitation of the Lord’s Prayer, the Magnificat, the 23rd Psalm. I could not hear most of her speech, but then I was not meant to hear her words, they were spoken for the ears of Jesus Christ, and I know He heard them.

Sitting on the edge of my mother’s bed, I thought of the times as a child that our family knelt around my parent’s bed, and recited prayers and read aloud scripture, Roman and Protestant alike, and I thought of holding the gentle hand of my mother as she lead me into church on Sunday mornings, and the firm hand of my father leading me to those occasions when he told me, quite truthfully I later discovered, that his disciplinary actions would “hurt him more than I.”

Within hours of our sharing liturgy and prayer, my mother would die, her body resuscitated, intubated, ventilated, and maintained fresh for a day or two more, but her being, her self, her consciousness, her soul had already “left the building,” and she stood even then redeemed and joyous before God Almighty.

As these legions of magnificent warriors and peacemakers pass, I can reflect only that they are truly the “greatest” of us all, and I will ponder, until my death, why we, why I, have failed to leave my children a world better and safer place than my parents, in their prime, left us. The question my reflection inevitably poses is, are we, or are we not, a Christian nation?

My mother was troubled by the world in which she spent her last years. She readily admitted her failure and faults, and was more hopeful than I that we could change course, that prayer would alter our nation’s path, and that somehow, God would continue blessing these United States. I conclude that her faith and optimism was rooted in her personal success in achieving what she sought to achieve, and in the buoyancy of her generation’s victories over the Great Depression, World War, Social Injustice, and the Soviet Menace.

We, well, we have achieved some really good music, and our children have invented social media, really large screen television, and together we and our children have achieved a chaotic inchoate welfare state and bi-partisan political paralysis. Of course, we can find anything we need or want, for a easy payment price.

Mother, thank you for surviving the Great Depression, thank you for flying over “The Hump” seventy times, thank you for always giving all you had and always doing your best. Thank you for the life you gave me, and the world you created for me. And finally mom, thank you for the last six years, for allowing me the privilege of honoring you, just as God commands, and especially mother, thank you for never stopping hoping that we would someday, “Get back to God, and get it right.”

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Oh my… ha!

I am in great sympathy with the educators of the State of Nebraska, regarding the obvious gender discrimination which results from following old fashioned notions of proper syntax, pronoun usage and health science practices.

I propose a simple factual science-based solution for minors attending Nebraska public schools: administrators, teachers and staff should address minors as Penises or Vaginas, allowing the physician performing the annual school physical to certify which one each is; and for the “trans-sexual” children, who must number in the millions, if we are to believe the Left and the Mainstream Media, call them, depending on their trending appearance, Vagenises or Penginas.

Now, let’s discuss the public health dilemma of “Legal” male homosexual “Marriage” and the potential health risks of the recurrent unsanitary practice of “Anal Sodomy”…. not to mention what men did in Gomorrah.

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