On 11Oct2006, at 9:19 PM, Carolyn Kunin wrote: 0000,0000,FFFF> I can't  imagine the college would sit by while someone who is clearly and openly 0000,0000,FFFF > insane teaches there Dear MR, You may be surprised to learn that when I made this argument years ago, Don Johnson tried (seriously? it seemed so) to argue that in the fifties the quality of Russian/Slavic Departments was so low that he didn't think my argument was valid. Carolyn I'm not (surprised, that is). I joined a Slavic Department in 1963 that for a few years was something of a looney bin. Our university was hastening at the time to take advantage of the post-Sputnik federal support for Russian/Slavic studies, and went in the space of three years from a one-woman Russian program within the Modern Languages department to a full-fledged Oriental and Slavic Languages and Literatures Department, with Russian, Polish, Serbo-Croatian and Hungarian courses, and a PhD program plan in development stages. In moving in this direction with sometimes less than deliberate speed, the department made a few ill-advised hires. No one on the faculty was clinically insane (I think), but a few were, in layman's terms, somewhat bonkers. In fairness to my alma mater, I should add that after these early growing pains we evolved into a very respectable Slavic studies program, staffed by individuals as sane as yours truly. Earl Sampson Geneva"The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious ... the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science." - Albert Einstein (1879-1955).