Saturday, May 5, 2012

That accursed recursive

Angry Words (Chronicle of Higher Education)

     Will one researcher's discovery deep in the Amazon destroy the foundation of modern linguistics?
     A Christian missionary sets out to convert a remote Amazonian tribe. He lives with them for years in primitive conditions, learns their extremely difficult language, risks his life battling malaria, giant anacondas, and sometimes the tribe itself. In a plot twist, instead of converting them he loses his faith, morphing from an evangelist trying to translate the Bible into an academic determined to understand the people he's come to respect and love.
     Along the way, the former missionary discovers that the language these people speak doesn't follow one of the fundamental tenets of linguistics, a finding that would seem to turn the field on its head, undermine basic assumptions about how children learn to communicate, and dethrone the discipline's long-reigning king, who also happens to be among the most well-known and influential intellectuals of the 20th century….
UC report calls for more tolerance of protests (San Francisco Chronicle)
The University of California's response to campus protests would play out very differently from last November's widely condemned pepper spraying of students at UC Davis and the beating of protesters at UC Berkeley under a new vision outlined Friday by UC officials.

UC Davis chancellor censured over pepper-spray incident (Sacramento Bee)
UC Davis' Academic Senate voted to censure university Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi for the events surrounding the pepper-spraying of students by campus police during tuition protests last November.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...