Liquor, beer, and wine…

3 07 2008

Have a mint julep, son!

Another reason why the American Political Science Association won’t move the 2012 meeting: the soon-to-open Museum of the American Cocktail in New Orleans.  Why Mayor White and the Houston City Council didn’t make a pitch for this thing in the name of economic development is beyond us…

What does your cocktail say about you?  Find out here.

For enlightenment and mixology ideas, visit the Science of Drink Blog

And finally… we can’t end a post on booze without a link to the Reverend Horton Heat’s “Liquor, Beer, and Wine.”

Heh. ;-)





Humor Aside: Previewing the fight over UST’s Core Curriculum reform…

3 07 2008

The PoliSci Department in action…

This clip reminds us how some university committee meetings turn out…  Heh. ;-)





Yet one more POSC Summer II course update…

1 07 2008

With less than a week to go until the Summer II Term starts — Summer I Finals start today — here are the latest PoliSci course enrollment updates for the Summer II Term. It looks like it’s going to be an all-Taylor Summer II:

  • POSC 2332 — American and Texas Government II with Professor Bob Warren has been canceled.
  • POSC 3373/MLPOS 5373 — Public Administration Ethics with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 7 students and always has room for more…
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Sea Law: Pirate Treasure and Salvaging Rights with Professor Jeremy Heallen has been canceled.
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Secession and the Constitution with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 8 students and always has room for more…
  • MLMLA 6393 — Houston: The Course with Dr. Jon Taylor is currently full and wait-listed.

As always, go to MyStThom for the latest course updates.





Does McCain have more of a base problem than Obama?

27 06 2008

The graph above is from data compiled from Rasmussen Reports, consisting of over 7,000 likely voter interviews conducted within the past week.  

The combined favorable numbers are not very different from one another. Obama’s combined favorables among Democrats are at 82% and McCain’s combined favorables among Republicans are at 84%. However, the aggregate favorable numbers conceal information about the strengths and weaknesses of both Obama and McCain.

A greater number of Democrats’ — roughly 8% — have a very unfavorable view of Obama. They will likely not vote for Obama under any circumstances. Only 4% of Republicans feel that way about McCain. The aggregate unfavorables are also quite similar, 18% for Obama and 16% for McCain. If the Democrats can reduce the Democratic defection rate from 2000 and/or 2004, Obama will win.  

The more revealing number from Rasmussen — and one that could make a significant difference for down-ballot races, including Harris County — is the enthusiasm level. 56% of Democrats have a very favorable view of Obama, while just 34% of Republicans have a very favorable view of McCain. Fortunately for McCain, 52% of Republicans have a very unfavorable view of Obama, while only 33% of Democrats feel that way about McCain. There may be little enthusiasm for McCain among Republicans, but there is decidedly even less enthusiasm for an Obama Presidency. Conversely, strong enthusiasm among Democrats, combined with deep pockets, could (and likely would) overcome Republican GOTV efforts and potentially have a cascade effect on down-ballot races.

Cuss and discuss among yourselves. It’s Friday in the Bayou City and we’re heading to Hans’ Biergarten for some well-deserved beers and sausages… 8-)

 

Hat tip to FiveThirtyEight!





Charlie Weis is Homer Simpson

27 06 2008

For our Domer colleague, Dr. John Burke, courtesy of SI on Campus’ Campus Clicks Blog:

The Simpsons is one of those shows that unites people across all demographics. Notre Dame football, on the other hand, is one of those things that everyone but Digger Phelps and NBC executives seems to hate. Despite that, Bleacher Report thinks Notre Dame is The Simpsons of college football. Our question: which Notre Dame player or coach is Flanders’ counterpart?

Heh. 8-)





Yet another POSC Summer II course update…

25 06 2008

With less than two weeks until the Summer II Term starts (and one week until Summer I Finals), here are the latest PoliSci course enrollment updates for the Summer II Term:

  • POSC 2332 — American and Texas Government II with Professor Bob Warren currently has 5 students.  The course may or may not make.  We need at least two more students to be safe!
  • POSC 3373/MLPOS 5373 — Public Administration Ethics with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 7 students and always has room for more…
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Sea Law: Pirate Treasure and Salvaging Rights with Professor Jeremy Heallen has only 2 students and will be canceled if we do not get another 5 students or so into the course.  A reminder: The course can count toward your elective hours within the PoliSci undergraduate major or toward the 18 hours for the PoliSci concentration within the Masters of Liberal Arts degree.
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Secession and the Constitution with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 8 students and always has room for more…
  • MLMLA 6393 — Houston: The Course with Dr. Jon Taylor is currently full and wait-listed.

As always, go to MyStThom for the latest course updates.





Coffee Study: Coffee won’t kill you and might extend your life…

22 06 2008

A new study finds that coffee drinking.  That’s good news for us because we drink even more coffee than beer in PoliSci… 

Researchers from Harvard and the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid used 20 years of surveys from two groups of health professionals to draw this conclusion: Death does not come any sooner for those who drink more coffee.  Regular coffee drinking (up to 6 cups per day) is not associated with increased deaths in either men or women (that will make some of us in the department very happy). In fact, both caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee consumption is associated with a somewhat smaller rate of death from heart disease.  Heh.

Now if they could only come up with similar findings regarding microbrew beer, Tex-Mex, and the occasional Shipley’s donut… ;-)

Hat tips: ABC News and Science Daily.





Could you take an e-mail vacation once a week?

21 06 2008

David Schaper of NPR reports on a story of great significance to us: e-mail.  He profiles U.S. Cellular’s move to absolve its workers from having to look at, or respond to, e-mails on Fridays. Nothing was mentioned about having to respond to that exiled Nigerian oil minister who needs your bank account information in order to split $20 million dollars…

We’d love for our Dean and Academic VP to emulate U.S. Cellular’s initiative by proposing that UST faculty get an e-mail vacation 7 days a week…

Heh.   ;-)





2008 Primaries and caucuses brought big increase in youth vote

20 06 2008

According to an analysis by the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at the University of Maryland at College Park, the 2008 Presidential election cycle is the third in a row in which the number of citizens under the age of 30 who participated in primaries and caucuses rose substantially

In the 17 states where exit polls were conducted in both the 2000 and 2008 primary seasons, the share of youth voters turning out for primaries and caucuses almost doubled, rising from 9% in 2000 to 17% in 2008. In some states, three or four times as many young people participated in 2008 as had done so eight years before. The Center found that nationally a record 6.5 million voters under the age of 30 participated in the primaries and caucuses this year.

Not surprisingly, Obama was heavily favored by Democrats under the age of 30, winning 60% of all votes in this age demographic, as well as the support of a majority under-30 voters in 32 of the 40 states for which exit-poll data are available.  For Republicans under-30, it was a little more divided: 34% for McCain, 31% for Huckabee, 25% for Romney, and 10% for Paul.

The Texas numbers?  Check ‘em out here.

 





Late-Life Ph.D.’s

20 06 2008

Here’s a story from the Chronicle of Higher Education by Political Science Professor Stan Katz from Princeton for all of our readers who engage in self-sabotage, thinking that you somehow can’t start down a new career path or degree program simply because of age. Think again.

We have posted Katz’ entire story here, because we think it’s that important (and because it may now be gated): 

My friend Michael Ebner of Lake Forest College recently sent me an article from The Chicago Tribune that relates the story of Mark Horowitz, who last week received his Ph.D. in History from the University of Chicago at the age of 58. It seems that he has set something of a record for length of time as an ABD, since he began his graduate work in 1974 and passed his orals in 1976.

I may have known him, in fact, since I was teaching in the Law School and History Department at Chicago during those years, but I cannot remember him. Thirty-two years is a long time to work on a dissertation, even one on law and statecraft under Henry VII, the great Tudor king of England. Good for you, Dr. Horowitz.

But I doubt that Horowitz is the all-time record holder for longest (successful) ABD experience. When I was a graduate student in history in the late 1950s, I engaged a dissertation typist — and it occurs to me that only my oldest readers will have submitted mechanically typed dissertations! — an expert, confined to a wheelchair, who made his living typing Harvard dissertations. I can still remember one on the shelf over his machine — many inches of paper, entirely yellow at one end, and bleaching to white at the other. This was the dissertation in progress on Rufus King that I believe was begun in the 1930s by a man who was his lineal descendant. I received my degree in 1961, and my memory is that Mr. King actually finished his dissertation shortly thereafter. But the story has an ending less happy than that of Dr. Horowitz. King had apparently not kept up with modern historical scholarship and failed his dissertation defense. The Harvard history department was apparently not long on empathy in those days.

But a close friend (from Harvard College days), Charles Booth, has had a much happier experience. Charlie decided to take early retirement from a banking job (at which he had been brilliantly successful) in his late 50s, and asked me if I could arrange for him to audit history classes at Columbia, since he had realized that his deepest interest was in studying history. I encouraged him to be more ambitious, and to apply for a Ph.D. He was skeptical that any department would accept a graduate student his age, but in fact he was admitted to the New York University doctoral program in American history, specializing in diplomatic history. Along the way he had to learn how to use a computer, and to remind himself how to sit in lectures. But he perservered, and, under the direction of Marilyn Young, wrote a brilliant dissertation on the United States’ response to the Greek War of Independence (disclosure: I served on his dissertation committee). Charlie received his Ph.D. at the age of 71, I think he was at the time, a few years ago, the oldest person to receive a Ph.D. at NYU. Horowitz is, comparatively, a spring chicken.

These men give new meaning to the idea of “lifelong learning,” and I say bravo to all three of them!





Political Science, gay marriage, and the Big Easy…

20 06 2008

Matthew J. Franck, a Professor and Chairman of Political Science at Radford University in Virginia, discusses a story in today’s National Review about the American Political Science Association (APSA) that has been flying well under-the-radar in the media, but has been the cause of fervent debate within Political Science. Iraq? Guantanamo? Global warming? Nope. Gay marriage. Specifically, Louisiana’s new amendment to the state Constitution granting exclusive recognition of marriages between men and women only. The issue threatens to tear APSA, and by definition, Political Science, apart.  Why?  Because APSA rarely engages in this kind of political fight — yes, ironic that Political Science doesn’t often engage in politics, but Vietnam almost tore APSA apart in the 1960s.

Practically speaking, the application of a boycott on 44 states (26 with traditional marriage amendments and another 18 by statute) is going to be problematic at best.  I guess that it means that fellow APSA members should expect a lot of meetings in California or Massachusetts if the ASPA Council approves the resolution at this year’s meeting in Boston.  Also expect that a number of African-Americans within ASPA might be rather peeved that APSA withdrew from post-Katrina, gay-friendly New Orleans…

The Manhattan Institute’s Charlotte Allen also weighs in on the same subject in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal.  Allen suggests that:

The best approach for the APSA might be to follow the counsel of Daniel Lowenstein, a specialist in electoral politics at UCLA’s law school: “The whole purpose of the organization is to provide a forum where politics and the political process are researched and debated, not to take sides on controversial political issues.” Are these academics prepared for such a radical idea?

To my fellow Political Science brethren: Feel free to cuss and discuss… As for me, I never go to APSA anyway, so the whole gay marriage boycott thing is an abstract argument.  I’m a Public Administration guy.  APSA has a tendency to make PA feel like an unloved bastard child who just managed to crawl out of the locked basement during the fancy dinner party…

I guess that we won’t get a resolution about that anytime soon at an APSA meeting, will we?





Syracuse U. nixes a Political Science professor’s polling for partisan Candidates

18 06 2008

 

Hmmm… An interesting story from today’s Chronicle of Higher Education by Allie Grasgreen.  It makes perfect sense for Syracuse — or any university (including Houston area ones, ahem) — to make the professor cease and desist in the use of university resources for partisan purposes.  Period.  

From the Chronicle story:

A political-science professor and veteran pollster at Syracuse University, Jeffrey M. Stonecash, has tentatively agreed to cease using university resources in polls he conducts for political candidates, The Post-Standard, a local newspaper, reported today.

University officials had asked Mr. Stonecash to shut down his operation after a Democratic candidate for Congress complained that the professor was using Syracuse to promote a partisan business for private gain. Mr. Stonecash will meet with university officials later today, at which point the decision may be made final.

Mr. Stonecash, a registered Democrat, has hired students to conduct the polls. During his 24 years as a pollster, he has worked for New York politicians on both sides of the political aisle. He has also polled for nonprofit groups, school districts, private businesses, and the university’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, where he teaches.

Mr. Stonecash’s most recent poll, released in April, was for a Republican Congressional candidate, Dale Sweetland. A spokesman for Mr. Sweetland’s opponent in the race, the Democrat Dan Maffei, said the campaign had not filed a formal complaint with the university but had raised concerns with Syracuse officials.

Kevin Quinn, the university’s vice president for public affairs, acknowledged that an informal complaint had prompted Syracuse to act, but he did not identify the source.





PoliSci Summer II course offerings update…

18 06 2008

 

OK.  Here are the latest course enrollment updates for the Summer II Term:

  • POSC 2332 — American and Texas Government II with Professor Bob Warren currently has 5 students.  While the course should make, it would be nice to see a couple of more students in there!
  • POSC 3373/MLPOS 5373 — Public Administration Ethics with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 7 students and always has room for more…
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Sea Law: Pirate Treasure and Salvaging Rights with Professor Jeremy Heallen has only 2 students and will be cancelled if we do not get another 5 students or so into the course.  The course can count toward your elective hours within the PoliSci undergraduate major or toward the 18 hours for the PoliSci concentration within the Masters of Liberal Arts degree.
  • POSC 4393/MLPOS 6393 — Secession and the Constitution with Dr. Jon Taylor currently has 8 students and always has room for more…
  • MLMLA 6393 — Houston: The Course with Dr. Jon Taylor is currently full and wait-listed.

As always, please check MyStThom for the latest course updates.





The top Political Science paper on SSRN

18 06 2008

Noam Cohen’s recent article in the New York Times story about Social Science Research Network (SSRN) rankings got us to wondering about the top-ranked paper within Political Science.

The top-ranked paper?  John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt’s “The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy.” No surprise.  Maybe you’ve heard of it, since their book — based on the paper — was the cause of some controversy over the last year or so…

Its overall ranking within the SSRN is #139.  For comparison, check out the Humanities section, where the top paper (from a law professor) is beating the #2 downloaded paper by close to an order of magnitude. The reason? Its title is ‘F___’.





Homer Guevara Simpson: Cerveza o Muerte!!

16 06 2008

In honor of our absent friend and colleague, Professor Caroline Calvillo.   :-)

Picture courtesy of marcelcampos at Flickr.