Tag Archives: history

Pitt Pride

Banana split turns 100

University of Pittsburgh alumni have won the Nobel Prize, played in the National Football League and unlocked the secrets of DNA. On Wednesday, the university celebrated a less prestigious but equally sweet accomplishment รขโ‚ฌโ€ the banana split.

Pitt declared Wednesday “Banana Split Day” and celebrated the dessert’s 100th birthday by serving about 4,000 ice cream cones to university freshmen, family members, students and others returning to campus for the new school year.

Banana spilts I can be proud of. These poor excuses for journalism, I cannot.

High school’s at home; welcome to the collegiate hook-up (Part 1)

High school’s at home; welcome to the collegiate hook-up (Part 2)

What college doesn’t need a drunken debauchery and hedonism sex column? *rolls eyes*

Federalism Breeds Duopoly?

The authors of this
article
posit that creeping federalism turned American politics into the two-headed
monster it is today. If states had more power, they say, more parties might flourish,
as once they did. (Thanks, Dappled
Things
)

[T]he United States has not always been so dominated by two parties. Third parties (sometimes even fourth, fifth and sixth parties) once competed successfully in congressional elections, winning significant portions of the popular vote and often gaining seats in Congress. This was true for most of the 19th century and even the early part of the 20th.

By the Book

History is often said to be written by the conquerors, but that doesn’t stop the
defeated, the also-rans, the marginalized, and the unappreciated from writing
history textbooks.

HISTORY LESSONS
How Textbooks from Around the World Portray U.S. History

Here are a few things students in this country will not find in their history books but that students from certain other countries may know for a fact:

  • a) Our revolution was inspired by the work of the French Enlightenment philosophers (not the essays of John Locke).
  • b) We won that war largely because the British commanders were slow and blundering (not because of the wisdom and determination of George Washington).
  • c) What we thought of as a revolution was for many inhabitants of British North America an extended civil war, in which many were forced into exile.
  • d) After Gen. Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown in 1781, the Spanish and French fleets opened full-scale war with the British in the Caribbean.

As might perhaps be imagined, the facts betray points of view: a) comes from a French history text; b) from a British one; c) from a Canadian school history; and d) from a text published for the English-speaking West Indies.

It’s interesting to get a glimpse of how other countries
perceive American history. (Thanks, E-Pression)