Pulp Lives
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In true pulp fashion (“Sex, Cime & Videotape,” Winter 2007–2008), I am cranking this letter out in under five minutes. As a true pulp crazy (reader, historian, you name it), I have sold a few pulps to Bob Lesser and have had Ryerson Johnson as a house guest. I also have two pulp-history books in print: Sports in the Pulp Magazines and Pulp Western. There was no end to the ingenuity of the pulp storyteller. Case in point: a well-known pulp writer using the name Borden Chase (acquired from a glance out the window, where he saw a Borden Milk truck parked by the Chase Manhattan Bank) wrote what has been called one of the finest Western yarns ever: Red River. The plot was “borrowed” wholly from Mutiny on the Bounty. Instead of a sea voyage to carry breadfruit trees, a cattle drive; instead of horses, a ship; and so on. A genuine mutiny in each case. |
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John Dinan (SED’52) |
| I read with great interest Chris Berdik’s “Bracing for the Storms” (Winter 2007–2008). It is very apparent to me that until scientists, researchers, even reporters stop thinking inside the box, there will never be the breakthrough everyone is looking for. Thinking only according to “operative laws of physics” limits our vision and does not free the mind for the abstract. To me, the great ones did not think; they imagined. The top IQs of all time belong to artists, imaginers. |
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Debby Sapper (SED’75) |
I’d like to respond to the letter from David Saroff (CAS’79) (“Letters,” Winter 2007–2008) about the article “The Really Long Good-bye” in the fall issue, which he concludes by saying, “And you really do not want to mess with the Bear family.” I must agree. I never wanted to see parents. I recently resigned my professorship at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro after thirty-one years to take a job in a nonacademic institution. When I first started teaching in the 1970s, there was no parental interference at all. I remember my department head telling me to deal with a student complaint about the cost of course materials, which I did handily: “Don’t complain to the head. She is not your mother; I am your mother. Complain to me.” Problem solved, without Mommy or Daddy. About fifteen years ago, I had a complaining call from a student who earned an F in one of my courses and failed to graduate. I offered to have him take the final exam again; if he passed the second time, I might consider changing his grade, but I couldn’t guarantee that he would graduate. He declined. Again, no parents. Two years ago a senior who was advised not to take one of my classes took it anyway and failed, and failed to graduate. This time, the student’s mother called to complain. The department head said the student could walk at graduation but would not get a diploma. The mother said that was not good enough and requested a meeting. The head and I agreed that the student should make the appointment. The mother replied that the student could not see us for a month, since she was vacationing in Central America ¾ a graduation present from Mommy and Daddy. She finally made an appointment to see us in the middle of the summer. It went like this. Student: “I demand a C.” Me: “No, you earned an F.” Student: “That is unfair.” Me: silence. Department head: “Thank you for coming in to see us.” End of meeting. I later found out that a decision was made to allow the student credit for the course she earned an F in, so she could get her now completely worthless diploma. |
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Mark D. Gottsegen (CFA’74) |
I appreciate the recent changes in your magazine. Previously, when I received Bostonia, I would browse through it, reading one or two articles, and then dispose of it, because I didn’t feel it would be of interest to anyone other than BU graduates. In this latest issue, I read most of the articles, which I found very interesting. I’m also planning to include it with the other magazines I give to our local library. Many of the articles will be of interest to others. |
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Marianne U. Buddington (SED’61) |
Husain Haqqani, with his Pakistani heritage and diplomatic experience (“Explorations,” Winter 2007–2008), sounds like an excellent candidate for serving the next president of the United States. He has posed questions that, when answered, could lead to solutions to the unrest and violence emanating from the Muslim world. Haqqani’s question at the end of the article, “How can the United States and other Western powers build relationships with the Muslim world without understanding what happens in the Muslim mind?” is one I have been asking myself. The way our government approaches foreign policy with other non-Western governments is bound to fail until a supreme effort is made to reach out with understanding and compassion and not with, “We have the answers to your problems, so just do it our way and you will be fine.” |
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Marjorie Maher |
I have always looked forward to reading Bostonia. It was a study in good journalism and all that that implies. It was as good a read as any literary magazine I receive. Your new format is so distracting, with its two colors on each page and its harsh, unappealing type, that I find it virtually unreadable. I hurried through it skimming the stories
and hoping it would change on some page. It is more reminiscent of People than of Bostonia. Is this the future? |
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LaVerne Kayne (SED’54) |
One of the things I most enjoy about receiving Bostonia is the wonderful glimpse of Boston it offers. Although I now reside in Atlanta, I still enjoy seeing the Boston landscape and skyscrapers. I also love to read about what students are doing, and it keeps me in touch with my fellow alumni. Keep up the good work. |
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Renee Atchison (CAS’80) |
I was seated at my fifteen-year-old word processor composing a letter thanking you for the article “The Search for the Missing Ice Age” (Winter 2007–2008), which suggests that one of the greatest scams of all time, man-made global warming, may be caused by something other than man-made (read: American) pollution, when my wife called me to watch the news on television. |
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Carl Campagna (CAS’52, LAW’53) |
What has happened to the collective noun, the third-person singular, and the subjunctive “might”? |
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Robert Kelley (STH’80) |
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