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Bill Cole
Bill Cole (right) performing with Warren Smith in October 2005 in Takoma Park, Maryland
Background information
Birth nameWilliam Shadrack Cole
Born1937 (age 86–87)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Genres

Occupations

Instruments
Years active1974 – present
LabelsBoxholder Records (de)
Spouse
Linda Joy Punchatz (maiden)
(m. 1967, divorced)
Sarah Elizabeth Sully (maiden)
(after 1982)

Academic background
Alma mater
1974: Wesleyan University, PhD (with highest honors)
1987: Dartmouth College, Honorary MA
Influences
Academic work
Institutions
Professor of Music, Amherst College, 1972–1974
Professor of Music, Dartmouth University, 1974–1990
Professor of African American Studies, Syracuse University, 2005–2010

Websitebillcole.org
1968: Hank Levy was hired in 1968 to take over jazz studies at Towson University. Levy rapidly built the program to a level of international rank.


Re: William Shadrack Cole, PhD.

Laura Ingraham, while an undergraduate at Dartmouth and editor of the Dartmouth Review, sent an undercover reporter into a LGBTQ university organization to report on who was attending, according to Business Insider.[2] Magistrate Jerome Niedermeier stated that the [Dartmouth] Review makes no secret of its opposition to many blacks present at Dartmouth.[2]

  • 2014: Fox News' Laura Ingraham calls transition-related healthcare for transgender youth "child abuse."[3]

Academic appointments

[edit]

In 2006, Cole was

  • "Appointments, Tenure Decisions, and Promotions of African Americans in Higher Education – Bill Cole". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (50). The JBHE Foundation, Inc.: 118–119 Winter 2005–2006. JSTOR 25073394. Retrieved April 6, 2021("Bill Cole was named professor of African-American studies at Syracuse University. Cole, a performer and composer, has served as artistic director of Shadrack Inc. in New Rochelle, New York, a nonprofit organization formed to encourage artists of color."){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 1077-3711 (publication; print) ISSN 2326-6023 (publication; online), OCLC 5545902865 (article).

While studying for his PhD at Wesleyan University, cole studied with multi-instrumentalist Clifford Thornton.

Quoted
“I had played the piano for a long, long time but mostly the pieces that I played were European art music. And I’d always been interested in jazz and improvisational music much more than I was interested in European art music, he says. “So when I got [to Wesleyan], I really wasn’t proficient in playing any kind of improvisational style.”
Thornton gave him a double reed Chinese instrument called a sona and a Korean traditional instrument called a hojok, and asked that he learn to play them. “It was a real hard study because he never even told me that they used reeds,” Cole says. “He was the kind of a person who was like, ‘Okay, I’m gonna give you the tools, but you’ve got to learn how to work them and try to play them.’”
While working on the sona and the hojok for a couple of years, Cole also spent time at Thornton’s apartment, listening to him practice. “Clifford was the one who gave me the instruments and he also taught me how to listen to music and how to penetrate paths of the soloists and listen to the accompaniments,” Cole remembers. “That was a very valuable lesson that he gave.”
After listening to Thornton play an Indian instrument called the shena, Cole decided to purchase one himself. Next, he added a fourth instrument to his rotation, the Indian nagaswarm. With his unique and diverse musical approach, he formed the Untempered Ensemble in 1992. Over the span of 20 years, the ensemble has expanded from a trio to a septet featuring Asian, African, Australian, Carribean and American instruments. They’ve released a handful of albums on avant garde jazz label Boxholder Records, including seven pieces that correspond to the cycles of the Ibo of Nigeria’s reincarnation philosophy.
While Cole creates a majority of the Untempered Ensemble’s pieces, the group has recently begun incorporating compositions by pianist Don Pullen into their performances. Cole decided to highlight Pullen’s compositions with the group after hearing him guest on a public radio show. “I had never heard of anyone who had the facility that he had on the piano except for Cecil Taylor, and I really got interested in his music,” he says. “And you know, there were so many musicians who play this music that people have never even heard of…and Don Pullen died in 2005; He was only in his mid-50s.”[1]

Videography

[edit]
  • Dancers: Douglas Dunn and Dancers
  • Grazia Della-Terza
  • Grazia Della-Terza
  • Douglas Dunn
  • Sam Keany
  • Gwen Welliver
  • Christopher Caines
  • Laura Oguiza

Reflections of students

[edit]

May - Jun 2019 The “Big Questions” series responses revolve around gratitude, healthy introspection, and appreciation for the thoughtful influences of our alma mater and each other. The latest installment focuses on an interest sparked at Dartmouth that has become a core part of one’s life.


Anthony Desir responded, "Music—and in the strangest way. Jazz teacher Bill Cole announced to his rabble of disciples that if I ever dared to take his class he would fail me just to make a point. When I found that out, I signed up for his next class right away. The weird part: Despite our disdain for each other, I actually learned something about music, not just jazz, but all forms of music. Today I can listen, distinguish, and enjoy almost any kind of music, from classic and country to rock and jazz. I have to thank the challenge from Bill Cole for that."

link

New

[edit]
  • Dancers: Douglas Dunn and Dancers
  • Douglas Dunn
  • Guadelupe Martinez
  • Le Minh Tam (Trio 1)
  • Brooke Davila
  • Monica Olsson
  • Michelle Olson (Trio 2)
  • Terrence Brown
  • Georgia Corner
  • Bill Hedberg (Trio 3)
  • Stefanie Bland
  • Janet Charleston
  • Edmund Melville (Trio 4)
  • Grazia Della-Terza (walk-on)

Extant discography and diskography

[edit]

Solo and with selected artists

[edit]
  1. The First Cycle (1980). Recorded August 1, 1975. Bill Cole; Sam Rivers; & Warren Smith, Music from Dartmouth. OCLC 13625717 (all editions)[4][5]
  2. Unsubmissive Blues (1980). Bill Cole & Jayne Cortez, Bola Press. Recorded October 1, 1979, Brooklyn[5]
  3. There It Is (1982). Jayne Cortez and the Firespitters, with Bill Cole. Bola Press. Recorded July 22, 1982, Brooklyn[5]
  4. Everywhere Drums (1990). Bill Cole & Jayne Cortez, Bola Press. Recorded June 21, 1990, New York[5]
  5. Double Sunrise Over Neptune (2007). Bill Cole & William Parker, AUM Fidelity. Recorded June 19, 2007, New York[5]
  6. Billy Bang and Bill Cole (2010). Billy Bang (violin); Bill Cole (didgeridoo, nagaswaram, sona, flute, shenai), Live, University of Virginia Chapel, Charlottesville, April 17, 2009. Shadrack[4][5]
  7. As If You Knew (2011). Bill Cole & Jayne Cortez, Bola Press.
  8. Portraits: Wind, Thunder and Love (2014). Bill Cole & Joseph Daley, Jodamusic Records.
  9. Trayvon Martin Suite (2015). Bill Cole & Joseph Daley, Jodamusic Records. (label of Joe Daley (de))
  10. Two Masters (Live at the Prism, Charlottesville, Virginia, April 1, 2004)" (2005). Bill Cole & William Parker, Boxholder (de)[a][4][5]

Bill Cole's Untempered Ensemble

[edit]
  1. Vision ONE [excerpts from "Seasoning the Greens"] (1997). Arts for Art. Live at the Orensanz Art Center, Lower East Side, Manhattan, 2nd Annual Vision Festival, May 28 – June 1, 1997
    Musicians: Bill Cole (didgeridoo, shenai, bell, agogô, piri, nagaswaram, hojok, sona); Cooper-Moore (harp, flute, rim-d); William Parker (double bass); Joe Daley (de) (tuba, baritone horn); Warren Smith (drums)[5]
  2. The Untempered Trio (1992).
    Musicians: Bill Cole (nagaswaram, hojok, sona, shenai, balaphone); Warren Smith (multi-percussion); Joe Daley (baritone horn, tuba, synthesizer). Recorded BMG Studios, New York, NY, November 22, 1991, and Howard Schwartz Studios, New York, NY, September 21, 1992. Shadrack Records. OCLC 35689489
    1. "Evil Sown By a Man Will Grow on His Children's Heads," composed by Cole
    2. "Peace for Nagaswarm," composed by Cole
    3. "Sayonara Baby," composed by Smith
    4. "Song for Clifford Thornton," composed by Cole
    5. "When the Needle Drops From the Leper's Hand He Struggles to Grasp It – So Struggles the Mind With a Difficult Problem," composed by Cole
    6. "Dear Sarah Sully," composed by Cole
    7. "Don't Let Politeness Make You Run the Risk of Contracting Disease," composed by Cole
    Titles for 1st, 5th, and 7th works are Yorùbá proverbs.[4]
  3. Untempered Ensemble Live in Greenfield, Massachusetts (2000). Bill Cole's Untempered Ensemble, Boxholder (de)
    Musicians: Bill Cole (didgeridoo, sona, Tibetan trumpet, hojok, shenai, nagaswaram, bamboo flute); Cooper-Moore (flute and hand-made instruments, mouth bow, harp (horizontal hoe-handle), rim-drums, three-string fretless banjo); Sam Furnace (de) (alto sax, flute); William Parker (double bass); Joe Daley (de) (tuba, baritone horn); Warren Smith (trap drum set, gongs, marimba, dunno drum – one of several talking drums, hourglass shape, West Africarainsticks); Atticus Cole (congas, bongos, timbales, rainsticks)
    First CD:
    1. "Struggles of Fanny Lou Hamer"
    2. "The Short Life of Amadou Diallo"
    Second CD:
    1. "Freedom 1863: a fable"
      1. "Introduction"
      2. "Interlude"
    Boxholder (de) BXH008 & BXH009

    OCLC 56747508[6][5]


  4. Duets and Solos, Volume I" (2000); Boxholder (de) BXH 011[6][5]


  5. Duets and Solos, Volume II" (2001); Boxholder (de) BXH 015[6][5]


  6. Seasoning the Greens (2002)
    1. "Introduction by Bill Cole" (spoken)
    2. "Grounded"
    3. "The Triple Towers of Kyongbokkang," by Warren Smith
    4. "South Indian Festival Rhythm"
    5. "Ghanaian Funeral Rhythm"
    6. "South Indian Marriage Rhythm"
    7. "Colombian Rhythm"
    8. "Free Rhythm"
    9. "A Man Sees a Snake, A Woman Kills It; No Matter, As Long as It Is Dead"
    All compositions by Bill Cole, except as noted
    Recorded at FlynnSpace, Burlington, Vermont, March 31, 2001
    Boxholder (de) BXH 031
  7. Proverbs for Sam, (2008)
    1. "Don't Wait For the Day of Battle Before Getting Your Weapons Ready"
    2. "If a Blacksmith Continues to Strike an Iron at One Point, He Must Have a Reason"
    3. "The Drum Sounding a Message in War Is Beaten in a Cryptic Manner"
    4. "No One Knows the Paths in a Garden Better Than the Gardener"
    Musicians: Bill Cole Chinese sona, digeridoo, Indian shenai, Ghanaian flute, Indian nagaswarm); Sam Furnace (de) (alto saxophone, flute); Joseph Daley (baritone horn, tuba, trombone); William Parker (double bass); Warren Smith (percussion, marimba, voice, whistle); Cooper-Moore, diddly bow, rim drums, flute, voice); Atticus Cole (percussion)
    Proverbs 1–3 recorded live June 1, 2001, at the Vision Festival, Lower East Side, Manhattan. Proverb 4 recorded live March 31, 2001, at the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, Burlington, Vermont

    OCLC 399557131

  8. Untempered Ensemble (2011); Boxholder (de)[6]
  9. Politicsm – A Tribute to Jayne Cortez (2013); Boxholder (de)
  10. Sunsum (released December 29, 2014)
    Musicians: Bill Cole (didgeridoo, shenai, nagaswaram, suona, composition, liner notes); Joseph Daley (euphonium, tuba, percussion, arrangements); Ras Moshe (tenor saxophone, flute, percussion); Gerald Veasley (bass guitar); Lisette Santiago (percussion); Warren Smith (drums, percussion)
    1. "Grounded" (audio via YouTube)
    2. "The Dove Finds Peace Everywhere" (audio via YouTube)
    3. "Great Loss Is Yours if Your Love for Another Is Not Returned" (audio via YouTube)
    4. "A Scar Is Never so Smooth As Natural Skin" (audio via YouTube)
    5. "Evil Sown By a Man Will Grow on His Children's Heads" (audio via YouTube)
    Recorded July 7th, 2014, at the Clemente Soto Velez Cultural and Educational Center, Lower East Side, Manhattan as part of the Evolving Music Series of Arts of Art.
  11. The Living Lives Not Among the Dead. Why Seek It There? Text by Chief Fela Sowande. Live recording, October 11, 2002, New York. Bill Cole (label) (2018)
    1. Part I
    2. Part II

    The performance was dedicated to Wilber Morris, bassist who died August 8, 2002.[6]

Douglas Dunn, New York choreographer, staged a performance of "The Living Lives Not Among the Dead. Why Seek It There?" at for Danspace Project at St. Marks Church in the East Village, Manhattan, May 26, 2005.

Discog references

[edit]

xxxxxxxxxxx

  • Shanley, Michael C. (born 1984) (April 1, 2009). "Bill Cole: Proverbs for Sam". JazzTimes (review). ISSN 0272-572X. Retrieved April 20, 2021 (Shanley is a Pittsburgh-based jazz journalist and musician. He is the grandson of the late DJ, "Mad Mike," Michael John Metrovich; 1936–2000){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)

xxxxxxxxxxxxx


"Mistreatment of Faculty of Color"

[edit]

Cole's family

[edit]
  • Professor Cole's father was a dentist in Pittsburgh. Miles Davis' father was a dentist.
  • Cole daughter, Althea SullyCole, PhD student in Ethnomusicology, Columbia University.
  • Cole's first wife, Linda Joy Punchatz (maiden), an artist, is a niece of the late science fiction and fantasy artist Don Ivan Punchatz (1936–2009), whose son, Gregor Punchatz (her cousin), is a digital artist for film and video games.

Other conservative student-run publications

[edit]

SMU Law Review

[edit]

The effect of political correctness on students is shown by the enactment of various restrictive speech codes as well as by the pressure put on students by the university, student special interest groups, and faculty to conform to a certain ideological viewpoint. A recent incident at Dartmouth demonstrates that political correctness can be enforced through other means than by enacting restrictive speech codes. In February 1988, The Dartmouth Review, a conservative weekly newspaper, published a highly critical review of William S. Cole's course noting his use of foul language in class and his reference to students as honkies.[8] Four members of the Review approached Cole, a black professor, at the conclusion of his music class to invite him to respond to the review of his class. The confrontation turned into a shouting and pushing match between the professor and Review members. After breaking the flash attachment off a photographer's camera, Cole then ordered the students to leave. Black students charged that the article and classroom incident were racially motivated; the Review insisted that they were simply criticizing a professor's teaching ability. Dartmouth filed charges against the students the next day for harassment, invasion of privacy, and disorderly conduct. No university action was taken against Cole.

A university panel found four students –

  1. John Quilhot ( John William Quilhot; BA '91),[9]
  2. John Sutter ( John Henby Sutter) (affiliated with the Dartmouth class of '88; but earned a BA in English literature from Suffolk University in '93), and
  3. Christopher Baldwin ('89)[10] – guilty of the charges and for initiating and secretly recording the "vexation exchange" with Cole.[8]
  4. Sean Nolan

Quilhot was suspended until the fall of 1988; Sutter and Baldwin for a year longer. The suspensions were upheld on appeal to the dean. The Review charged Dartmouth with censorship and reverse discrimination. A New Hampshire state judge ordered Dartmouth to reinstate two of the students on the ground that a member of the disciplinary panel was shown to be substantially biased and prejudiced against the students.[11] A federal court later dismissed the student's suit against the University.[12]

Note that Baldwin was involved in the Apartheid episode of 1986.[13]

Later the next semester, Cole's wife Sarah Sully, a French professor at Dartmouth, asked her students to write, in French, their opinions regarding the dispute between Cole and the Review.[14] Most of the class knew that Sully was Cole's wife and tailored their response in the exam to conform to her partisan opinion. Singh, at 58. One student who was unaware of the connection wrote an essay in support of the Review's position. The student received a "D" on the exam, despite his excellent French, because he refused to condemn the Review.[14] Sully declared that she could not "in good conscience reward an 'A' to someone who is writing racist remarks, no matter how well it is said."[15] The student appealed the grade and the department chairman held Sully's grading of the student to be inappropriate.


Faculty during Cole's era

[edit]
  • Hans H. Penner, PhD (1934–2012), was a leading scholar of comparative religion and member of Dartmouth's Religion Department for 36 years. He served from 1980-84 as Dean of Dartmouth's Faculty of Arts and Sciences.



Dartmouth Music Department Chairs
  • 1940: Donald Cobleigh, organist and head of the music department at Dartmouth College
  • 19??–1952: Arnold Kunrad Kvam (1910–1981), cellist, conductor, and educator
  • 19??–1953: Frederic Longhurst
  • 1953–1959: James Andrews Sykes (1908–1985), member of the Dartmouth music faculty from 1953 until his retirement in 1973
  • 1965–1968: Louis Milton Gill (1932–1968), who joined the Dartmouth faculty in 1959, was Chairman of the Music Department in 1968 when he was killed in the Northeast Airlines Flight 946 plane crash at Moose Mountain.
  • 1978: Jon Appleton, pioneer in electroacoustic music
  • 1976–1981: Charles Hamm, PhD (1925–2011)
  • 1981–19??: Professor Cole was Chairman of the Music Department at Dartmouth College and Director of college's John Coltrane Memorial World Music Lecture/Demonstration Series.
chairman emeritus of the music department at Dartmouth University link


  • link to below
  • Another year would pass before the lyrics as they are sung today would make their official appearance. Worked on by Prof. Charles Hamm, Lynne Gaudet, '81, Douglas Wheeler, '59, Caroline Luft, '89, and Dean Edward Shanahan, the new version provided eight changes to Hovey's original poem. On May 28, 1988, President James Freedman announced these changes to the College, and in the Commencement program that year, the new version, and only the new version, was printed. The title? Simply "Alma Mater".

Cole on Coltrane

[edit]

Cole gave his person opinion on Coltrane: "Wherein, then, lies the magic of this man's music? The answer, from my point of view is that it dealt with human problems in human terms for human beings in a human world. If there is 'turmoil' in his music, it includes the turmoil in the hearts and minds of ordinary men and women. It includes the turmoil and violence of the times through which Trane lived. But the magic in Trane’s music also must derive from the 'peace which passeth all understanding' that was in this man’s heart."[16]

Cole has done a painstaking job of analyzing the recordings. looking at them almost phrase by phrase (with the help of Andrew White's transcriptions).[17]
link



Succession

[edit]
Academic offices
Preceded by
Charles Hamm
(1976–1981)
Chair, Department of Music, Dartmouth College
1981 – 1984
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair, Department of African American Studies, Syracuse University
2005 – 2010
Succeeded by

Bibliography

[edit]

Annotations

[edit]
  1. ^ Boxholder Records Inc. was an American label incorporated March 16, 1999, in Vermont, by Lou Kannenstine ( Louis Fabian Kannenstine; 1938–2014). Boxholder specialized in producing CDs of avant-garde, free, and experimental jazz. Kannenstine and his wife, Peggy (née Margaret Lampe), ran Boxholder from their home at Rivendell Farm on Old River Road in Woodstock, Vermont.

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
















  • Ingraham, Laura (October 24, 1984). "Bill Cole's Song and Dance". The Dartmouth Review. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |lay-date=, |lay-url=, and |lay-source= (help)
  1. Note: The Dartmouth Review is not affiliated with Dartmouth College. The article was republished in the 35th Anniversary Issue of The Dartmouth Review. Vol. 36, no. 3 (May 9, 2016). p. 8 → link → via Issuu. Retrieved April 5, 2021. (original published January 1983, according to the AP)











  • Meigs, James B. (October 5, 1989). "College Papers Do the Right-Wing Thing". Rolling Stone. Vol. Issue 562. p. 98 (article mentions Vassar Spectator, the Princeton Tory, and the Dartmouth Review) {{cite magazine}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 0035-791X (publication), EBSCOhost 8910020298 (article).
















  • Morley Safer, host; James O. Freedman; Christopher E. Baldwin; William S. Cole; Jeffrey Hart (November 13, 1988). "Dartmouth vs. Dartmouth". 60 Minutes (VHS). CBS. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |lay-date=, |lay-url=, |lay-format=, and |lay-source= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) OCLC 19007739 (all editions).


NEW

[edit]



  • "Dis Sho' Aint No Jive, Bro". Dartmouth Review. 1982.


  • Garrett, James (October 19, 1988). "Ein Reich, Ein Volk, Ein Freemann". (German: Ein Reich, Ein Volk, Ein Führer → English: One Empire, One People, One Leader → James O. Freedman was, from 1987 to 1998, President of Dartmouth College). Dartmouth Review.



  • "The Privileged Class". Wall Street Journal. September 20, 1989. p. A24. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |lay-date=, |lay-url=, and |lay-source= (help)



  • Singh, Harmeet D. (Fall 1989). "Shanties, Shakespeare, and Sex Kits: Confessions of a Dartmouth Review Editor". Policy Review. Heritage Foundation. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |lay-date=, |lay-source=, and |lay-url= (help)



From Cole's article

[edit]










1983 Lawsuit

[edit]

Part One
In April 1983, The Dartmouth Review – an arch-conservative publication[1] not affiliated with Dartmouth College but operated by students – published an antagonistic article that harshly ridiculed Cole, personally and professionally. Laura Ingraham, then a student, was the author of one of the articles.[2][3][4][2] Andrew Pickens III was editor-in-chief of the Review in April.[5]

(Dinesh D'Souza, also then a student, was – around that time – Editor-in-Chief of the Review.)[6]


Sequence of events

[edit]
  • Cole file suit against the Review and three students. He was the subject of three articles during the Winter of 1983, the first in mid-January written by Laura Ingraham. The suit asks for $600,000 from the
  1. Hanover Review, Inc.
  2. Edmond William Cattan, Jr., the paper's former editor-in-chief
  3. Dinesh D'Souza, the paper's former chairman, and
  4. Laura Ingraham, staff writer who wrote the article

Cole filed the suit in Burlington's U.S. District Court

  • John Long was attorney for Cole; at least 40 members of the Dartmouth College community contributed money to help Cole pay for the suit.
  • The Review was represented by Blair Soyster of Rogers and Wells of New York City and Hughs, Miller, and Candon of Norwich, Vermont. The New York firm was headed by former Secretary of State, William P. Rogers.

= Continued

[edit]
Libel case
After two local newspapers – the Rutland Herald and Valley News – cited the Review to declare Cole "incompetent", Cole sued the Review for slander.[3] Cole also sued the Review for libel, but later dropped that suit.[7][4]
Slander case
The slander case was settled out of court after two years without the Review admitting guilt or providing any monetary compensation, but both the Review's and Cole's reputations were damaged.[8]


"I was taught all my life that if you get an education, things will open up. But what I learned is if you want to help your own people, it won't open up." "You have to sell yourself out enough so when you look in the mirror in the morning, you don't know who that is." – Bill Cole, reflecting on the cost of success in a White world. October 30, 1991, speaking as a guest lecturer in Bill Dixon's class at Bennington College.[9]

1985 lawsuit against the DR

[edit]

Rev. Richard Allen Hyde (born 1951), a Dartmouth College chaplain since 1978, filed a $3-million libel suite, claiming that the Review libeled him in articles concerning his professional and personal life.

The suit was filed January 22, 1985, in Grafton County Superior Court, and alleged that the Review published "several articles containing false, misleading and inflammatory information about (his) personal and professional life."

Editor Laura Ingraham said the suit is based on a series of articles, one involving a satirical column on left-leaning Dartmouth faculty titled the "Dartmouth Liberation Front."[10] "That was in the context of a satire and absolutely defensible on that ground," she said.[11] Hyde's suit named the Review and two former editors, Dinesh D'Souza of Princeton, N.J., and Andrew Lee Pickens III (born 1962) (Phillips Exeter '80; Dartmouth '84; UCLA '90 JD) of Fairfield, Ohio.

The suit was settled. The Review published an apology. Among other things, the Review had published that Hyde defended a group that advocated sex with adolescents.[12][13]

Lawsuit references

[edit]
  • "The Dartmouth Liberation Front". Dartmouth Review. April 16, 1984. OCLC 851443691 (publication).
  • "Apology To Rev. Richard Allen Hyde". Dartmouth Review. June 4, 1986. OCLC 851443691 (publication).

Buckley

[edit]

Thirty years earlier, in September 1951, Buckley published God and Man at Yale, which, in the words of McGeorge Bundy, "[was] a savage attack on that institution as a hotbed of 'atheism' and 'collectivism.'

God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of "Academic Freedom," by William F. Buckley, Jr., Introduction by John Chamberlain


In the early years of the Cold War, as universities expelled scholars with ties to the Communist Party, it became an article of faith among conservatives that the only targets of an ideological purge were people like themselves. As academician Julian Nemeth, PhD, put it:

"William F. Buckley's God and Man at Yale [first printed September 1951, in the throes of emerging McCarthyism], the most important exponent of this view, argued that 'academic freedom' was a 'superstition' designed to promote liberal indoctrination. Buckley's work tweaked, and mainstreamed, claims that a subversive conspiracy had overtaken the nation's schools and colleges.

The Dartmouth Review

[edit]
  • Jones, Michael Keeney (March 15, 1982). "Dis Sho' Aint No Jive, Bro". Dartmouth Review – via "Lest the Old Traditions Fail" – a critical exploration of the history and reality of structural racism at Dartmouth College. Created by the Spring 2016 #BlackLivesMatter course at Dartmouth, developed through the Dartmouth Ferguson Teaching Collective (the author names Professor Michael David Green, PhD; 1941–2013, a preeminent historian of Native Americans of the South and then Chairman of Dartmouth's Native American Studies Department) {{cite journal}}: External link in |via= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) OCLC 851443691 (publication).


  • "Dartmouth's Dynamic Duo of Mediocrity". Dartmouth Review. February 24, 1988. OCLC 851443691 (publication).











  • William Cole v. Hanover Press, Inc. (1984). $2.4 million libel

The National Review

[edit]
  • "Putting the Bite on the Dartmouth Review". National Review. 34 (12): 744–745. June 25, 1982. ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 6093243 (article).




  • De Toledano, Ralph (March 28, 1986). "The 'Smaller' Music". National Review (Universal Press Syndicate). 38 (5): 66–67 (this article does not mention Bill Cole; but the author is an exponent of traditional jazz in a Panassié-esque sense, which is at the far opposite end of Cole's jazz genre spectrum. The point, here, is that the author and Buckley's publication, like Panassié, might be intolerant of free jazz. Buckley himself was a musician.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 12624551 (article).




  • Hart, Jeffrey, PhD (May 13, 1988). "The Ivory Foxhole – Scuba Diving In the Cesspool". Item No. 4. National Review. 40 (9): 43.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 12231458 (article).






  • Hart, Jeffrey (September 15, 1989). "Good News From Dartmouth". National Review. 41 (17): 18 (Sarah Sully, Cole's wife and a lecturer in French and Italian, assigned her freshmen French II class an essay on the Review. When a student failed to condemn the publication, she gave the student a D, remarking that his essay was racist. The grade was overturned by the department chair, Dean Dwight Lahr.){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 11567392 (article).


  • "The Cole Example". National Review. 42 (18): 18. September 17, 1990 (the article references two articles – The Boston Globe, August 22, 1990, "Embattled Teacher Quits Dartmouth" and The New York Times, August 22, 1990, "Target of Paper's Barbs Resigns at Dartmouth" – and defends the Review.){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 12485652 (article).





  • "The Week". National Review (Universal Press Syndicate). 59 (20): 14. March 5, 2007 "National Review takes a proprietary interest in Dartmouth College, thanks to senior editor Jeffrey Hart and the many veterans of the Dartmouth Review who have worked here. At long last, it looks like the game is up. Independent alumni, opposed to the liberal bureaucrats and empire-builders who run their school, managed to win four elections to the college's governing board of trustees, under a 116-year-old arrangement that allowed alums to pick half the trustees. This fall the administration packed the board, doubling the number of trustees that it could select. There will be enough rich, compliant trustees who want buildings named after them to let the administrators run the school in saecula saeculorum. The Dartmouth resistance must resign itself to being a movement of student gadflies. It is sad that principles and fun should be opposed to power, but it is not the worst trade-off in the world."{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISSN 0028-0038 (publication), EBSCOhost 27251754 (article).

Comments on NR

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Criticism of DR

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  • "President of Alternative Dartmouth Weekly Quits – 'I Cannot Allow the Review to Ruin My Life Any Further'". New York Times, The. Vol. 140, no. 48377 (Late ed.). October 3, 1990. p. A28. Retrieved April 17, 2021 – via TimesMachine LEAD: The president of The Dartmouth Review, a politically conservative student weekly newspaper, resigned today, denouncing the paper and its editor in chief for publishing on its masthead an anti-Semitic passage from Hitler's Mein Kampf.
    Unlike previous Review controversies, the center did not hold. "I cannot allow the Review to ruin my life any further," C. Tyler White declared soon after he resigned as President of the Review, "The official Review response, which I co-signed and helped distribute, avoids the main thrust of the issue. It does not emphasize our sorrow in this dreadful act of malice, nor does it claim responsibility for letting it reach newsprint ... The editor-in-chief has failed in his job, and now we must wear the albatross of anti-Semitism because he won't take responsibility for the issue’s contents." Review contributors David Budd and Pang-Chun Chen also resigned saying, "We are conservatives, but we are not Nazis ... " Budd noted that the paper’s apology implied "let’s put the blame on someone else." link
    {{cite news}}: External link in |postscript= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)



Conservative response to DR's Mien Kampf quote

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Conservative of the DR's 1988 lawsuit

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Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-roman> tags or {{efn-lr}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-roman}} template or {{notelist-lr}} template (see the help page).

  1. ^ Casey, February 26, 1989. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFCasey,_February_26,1989 (help)
  2. ^ a b Ingraham.
  3. ^ a b Ho, 2008.
  4. ^ a b New York Times, August 22, 1990. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFNew_York_Times,_August_22,1990 (help)
  5. ^ Farnsworth, June 10, 1983.
  6. ^ Farnsworth, April 18, 1983.
  7. ^ Associated Press, May 30, 1985.
  8. ^ Gardner, 2004.
  9. ^ Crabree, October 31, 1991.
  10. ^ Dartmouth Review, April 16, 1984.
  11. ^ UPI, February 1, 1985.
  12. ^ Journal News, June 8, 1986.
  13. ^ Loeb, 1995.