November 4, 2012 Recently we visited The Bahai House of Worship (Temple) in Wilmette, Illinois, one of eight serving continental areas. This House of worship’s “ornamental tracery” is a celebration of the light representing the new revelation from the latest messenger of God, Mirza Husayn-Ali. “The temple design transcends any specific culture, forming a unique structure” characteristicContinue reading “Bahai and Cao Dai Religious Sects: Syncretistic Monotheism”
Author Archives: profbartling1
MORE REAGANITE OR MORE HUMPHREYISH ?
June 8, 2011 The 100th birthdays of Ronald Reagan and Hubert Humphrey occurred early this year. Rick Perlstein’s op ed, America’s Forgotten Liberal, appeared in the NY Times on 5/27/2011. Humphrey is that forgotten liberal. Perlstein is the author of Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America. Perlstein opines that “our current malaise as a nation” is the result of Humphrey’s razor-thin defeat andContinue reading “MORE REAGANITE OR MORE HUMPHREYISH ?”
Yankee GI Confronts Jim Crow
October 29,2012 Conversation in the Becketwood Mancave (basement workroom) recently had a Yankee GI veteran describe a confrontation he had with segregation in the Jim Crow wartime South. A gentleman in his early nineties and a quietly reserved Mancave regular, raised in Minnesota, stated he had virtually no awareness of or interaction with African-Americans prior to military training in the South during WWII. He recalls his dismay and lackContinue reading “Yankee GI Confronts Jim Crow”
First Bartling Scholarship Awarded : Student David Edwards
October 21, 2012 The second Bartling History Lecture, October 17, 2012, presented “The Freedom to Move” a dialogue with University of Minnesota’s Dr. Donna Gabbacia. The occasion made possible the public awarding of the first Bartling Scholarship recipient, David Edwards. Selected by the history faculty, David is a senior majoring in history. Blogs on his Honors Program web site describeContinue reading “First Bartling Scholarship Awarded : Student David Edwards”
Memorable Events in my Mother’s Life
September 30, 2012 As family archivist my sister recently placed into my care some of our father’s courtship correspondence with our mother spanning the years 1916 through 1919. Among the letters was a Chicago Tribune clipping, yellow with age, describing Chicago’s celebration of the Armistice with Germany, November 11, 1918. After some thought the presenceContinue reading “Memorable Events in my Mother’s Life”
Musing on the Relevance of Truman’s 1948 Electoral Victory
April, 6, 2011 The Republican Party controlled both houses of Congress in 1947-1948. During the presidential campaign of 1948 – “The Give Em’ Hell Harry” campaign – Truman attacked the 80th. Congress as “The Do Nothing Congress”. After 14 years out of power The GOP attempted to undo the New Deal of FDR and the FairContinue reading “Musing on the Relevance of Truman’s 1948 Electoral Victory”
Romney and the 47% Dependency Group and the Entitlement State
September 18, 2012 The liberal magazine Mother Jones divulged today that Romney last May in a mischievous secret video divided the electorate into makers and moochers. Speaking to wealthy donors he characterized 47% of the electorate as “dependent on government” and folks who “believe they are victims”. These are those, Romney continued, “who believe that government hasContinue reading “Romney and the 47% Dependency Group and the Entitlement State”
Art and Culture in Nazi Germany and New Deal America : Contrasting Values/1933-34
September 9, 2012 My current reading includes Richard J. Evans’ The Third Reich in Power (2005), an account of peacetime Nazi rule 1933-39 emphasizing economic and cultural events. This work is the second volume in Evan’s magisterial The Third Reich Trilogy (2003 -2008), a work as one reviewer asserts, “a masterpiece of historical scholarship”. The Prologue sets the stage forContinue reading “Art and Culture in Nazi Germany and New Deal America : Contrasting Values/1933-34”
Second Annual Bartling Lecture is Announced: “Does the Freedom to Move Exist?”
August 30, 2012 The Second Annual Bartling Lecture is scheduled at Concordia University in St. Paul October 17th, 11:45-12:45. This convocation lecture will be given by Donna Gabbaccia of the University of Minnesota Department of History. Among her varied specialties is included US immigration history. Her impressive resume can be accessed at http://www.ihrc.um.edu/whoWeAre/profile.php?UID=drg. Professor Cabaccia provides the following descriptionContinue reading “Second Annual Bartling Lecture is Announced: “Does the Freedom to Move Exist?””
REPRISE: A SIBLING’S CELEBRATORY REQUIEM – BALANCING SADNESS AND GLADNESS
July 30, 2012 Within a few brief months my eldest and youngest siblings, Victoria and Barbara have both died. Youngest sibling Barbara is now “on another shore but in a greater light”. Having died Saturday (7-28) after a long struggle since 2002 with Parkinson’s disease she joined eldest sibling Victoria who reached that “other shore” firstContinue reading “REPRISE: A SIBLING’S CELEBRATORY REQUIEM – BALANCING SADNESS AND GLADNESS”