More letters from alumni
about Alumni Trustee ballot
April 19, 2002
How disappointing it was to receive the 2002 Princeton Alumni Trustee
Ballot. There was not a single mention of the family status of any
of the six candidates on my ballot. As we elect the leaders of my
great alma mater, is it now considered "politically incorrect"
to discuss whether or not any of these leaders have children of
their own? What could be more important than understanding whether
the stewards of Princeton students have ever raised any of their
own children? This is every bit as important a qualification as
some of the other meaningless trivia that is included as part of
the trustee profiles. Everybody is now so afraid to discriminate
against somebody that you are discriminating against those of us
who believe "family values" are very relevant to selecting
Princeton trustees. You've taken away our right to factor somebody's
family status and family values into our decision about who should
lead Princeton into the future. I am saddened and insulted. I hope
the decision to remove any mention of family will be reconsidered
in future ballots.
Buck Brown '85
Memphis, Tenn.
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April 11, 2002
Congratulations to the Alumni Association for having captured the
Florida ballot design expert to render the Alumni Identification
Authentication Form (known to its intimates as the AIAF.) I'm sure
there must be a sizeable population eager to hack in to the election
of Princeton trustees. After studying the form diligently, I mailed
in my ballot. My concluding threat is that if my ballot is disallowed,
I'm taking my appeal to the Supreme Court.
Charles Miller '45
Washington, D.C.
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December
19, 2001
I used to agree completely
with Charles W. Bray 55 (Letters, December 5) that one could
not make an informed voting decision based on the information, or
lack of, contained in the trustee ballot.
Several years ago, I
changed my mind after receiving a reply from university representative
Thomas Wright 62 to my letter of protest. I remember him stating
that this was not comparable to a national political election, so
one should not expect candidates to reveal positions on issues.
He also stated that the
Alumni Council nominating committee did such a thorough job of selecting
excellently qualified candidates that whoever won was superbly qualified
to serve, so we did not need any more information than the background
provided with the ballot.
Since coming around and
now understanding the true meaning of these elections and how the
nominating committee knows what is best for me and the university,
I now summon up all the knowledge and critical thinking skills acquired
by me as an undergraduate. I vote for the candidate with the most
pleasing photograph or the one with the easiest name to spell.
Max Maizels '72
Richmond, Va.
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August
8, 2001
I wholeheartedly support
Russell R. Willis's '66 criticism of the alumni trustee ballots
as they have evolved in recent years. His letter in the June 7 paw
is right on the mark.
It is always helpful
to learn of a candidate's personal and professional attainments
and some such information should be on the ballot, of course. But
the gut issue ó the only one that really matters, since we
can assume the Alumni Council nominating committee has done due
diligence ó is what the candidate thinks about one of the
great educational institutions of the modern world.
What is the candidate's
vision of Princeton's future? How would she or he want the university
to change over time? In what respects should Princeton not seek
to change? What does the candidate most value in a higher education?
What specifically does "Princeton in the nation's service and
the service of all nations" mean to the candidate?
These are the grounds
on which alumni should be asked to reflect and vote.
Charles W. Bray '55
Milwaukee, Wisc.
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July
4, 2001
I agree that the ballots
are wasteful. Few alumni have any way of making an intelligent choice.
Barry A. Cruikshank
'52
Red Bank, N.J.
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July
4, 2001
Is every candidate for
alumni trustee barren, unmated, or simply opposed to reproduction?
Do these success-driven supermen and women even like children?
Bios of trustee candidates
shipped to us for evaluation-before-voting don't reveal whether
candidates are mothers or fathers, and the number of their children.
This information was standard in candidate bios for decades.
Trustees function as
"parents" to thousands of Princeton students by helping
shape university policies that facilitate or impede the success
of their education.
It's important to some
of us that most (not all) of the professionally proven alumni we're
asked to consider for trustee think enough about the next generation
that they also participate in creating it. Thus they will care about
kids, have firsthand experience in coaching and financing their
march to maturity, and thus can make informed decisions about how
best to underwrite and educate promising sons and daughters in the
Princeton environment.
Superfathers and supermothers
should dominate the trustee candidate roster for these reasons.
By the same token, the few of us who take the time to review candidate
bios and vote for these key delegates should be given a broader
snapshot of their priorities and achievements, including parenthood.
Rob Mack '62
Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif.
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How could
Mr. Baumgartner determine that
his choices for trustee were a liberal, a liberal, or an ultra-liberal?
Does he get more information than I do?
I can only determine
the candidate's age, sex, location, occupation, and volunteer work.
I wish I could be informed of his poliical, social, and Princeton
views. There is no meat in the bio.
When I have complained
to the univeristy in the past about the inability to make an informed
vote, Vice President and Secretary Thomas Wright '62 has replied
to me that it doesn't matter. This is not comparable to a national
political election. The nominating committee does such an excellent
job of prescreening, that you cannot go wrong with whomever you
elect.
My take is: Then why
bother and waste the expense of this sham election?
Max Maizels '72
Richmond, Va.
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I
could not agree more with the letter of Terry
Wintroub '69 with regard to the complete waste of the present
balloting procedures but would like to add a different reason. As
a conservative I find I almost always have the choice of a liberal,
a liberal, or an ultra-liberal. Why bother?
Donavin Baumgartner,
Jr. '52
Naples, Fla.
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I
fully agree that alumni ballots for trustee have become a farce
although I have taken great pains to vote as responsibly as possible
until the last few years, when the Alumni Council excluded all personal
references to the personal convictions of candidates: religious
affiliations, philosophies, political opinions, educational theories,
moral practices etc.
I have no basis to select
one clone over another and cannot separate rubber stamps from creative
contributors. My tolerance level is very broad but I believe anyone
influencing education of youth should have some religious faith
and moral principles. The Presbyterian founders of Princeton would
be much less tolerant, and I am surprised the alumni have not rebelled
at the scheme that could permit us to be blindly selecting secularists.
I doubt that is the case as I suspect the typical trustee is theologically
traditional but forbidden to tell us what he stands for and what
changes he foresees for Princeton education. This is not some hidden
attack on coeducation, modern architecture, or even Professor Singer
but rather a vigorous defense of academic freedom for conservatives
and liberals alike. Are we only permitted to support rebellious
attacks on traditional values? This spin doctor control of information
also extended to publicity releases about our new president -- no
way to judge her value system -- no comparison with Dr. Dodd's criteria
[http://www.princeton.edu/~paw/more/more_17.html].
Nothing but blind faith
in the selection system and hope that Presbyterian predestination
or God's providence is still protecting the school they created.
Frank Hirsch '54
Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
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Wasteful
balloting
Two years ago on the
TigerNet discussion group Princeton-Matters, we kicked around the
practice of sending trustee ballots to alumni. I argued that the
printing, mailing, and tabulating are a colossal waste of time and
money. The Alumni Council Executive Committee appoints a nominating
committee, the nominating committee winnows hundreds of nominees
down to a handful of sterling finalists, any of whom would make
"fine trustees." Then the university sends short bios to us alums
and we cast our votes based on coin flip, she's cute, he's a classmate,
I knew him, I like doctors/corporate execs/do-gooders/whatever,
or some other nonsubstantive factor. The ballots tell us essentially
nothing to distinguish the candidates' intended or probable effect
on Princeton.
This year, over and above
the costs of printing, mailing, and tabulating, the Alumni Council
took out a full page ad on the back cover of PAW telling us how
important our vote is, even though 80 percent of us don't think
so.
"If you care about issues
like increasing the student body, the state of the residential colleges,
financial aid policy or the current alcohol initiative, then you
should vote for your alumni trustees."
Why should I vote just
because I care about these matters? Are some of the candidates opposed
to the increase, satisfied with the state of the colleges, amused
at the silliness of the alcohol initiative? Even if some are, how
would I know? There is nothing in those bios that tells me anything
about the candidates' beliefs on issues of concern to me.
These elections are a
complete waste of Princeton's resources. If we aren't going to be
given a substantive basis for selecting one candidate over another,
then drop the charade. At least stop aggravating the charade by
taking out ads telling us it's not a charade.
Terry Wintroub '69
Lawrenceville,
N.J.
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