Things Noted Here and There
At The Volokh Conspiracy, David Bernstein and Yale's Stephen Carter explore the fascinating counter-factual possibilities in Senator Robert Taft's proposal for federal equal employment opportunity legislation in 1946.
Scott McLemee is too gracious to shove the point in my face, but he explains why I was a muttonhead for noting John Fund's"Sayed and de Man at Yale," Opinion Journal, 20 March. Fund continues his criticism of the University's admission of Sayed Rahmattulah Hashemi as a special student in"Taliban Man at Yale," Opinion Journal, 23 March. He and others ought to ask the State Department and INS why Mr. Sayed has F-1 status, while his compatriots languish in Guantanamo or why Sayed should be a special student at Yale and Tariq Ramadan should not be a professor at Notre Dame.
Robin Wilson,"A Well-Behaved Scholar Makes History," CHE, 24 March, (subscribers only) features Harvard's Laurel Thatcher Ulrich and her well-wrought sentence,"Well-behaved women seldom make history."
Hillel Italie,"Historian Holds Dual Job of Dylan Buff," Washington Post, 22 March, features Princeton's Sean Wilentz. Thanks to Kevin Murphy at Ghost in the Machine for the tip.