A Timid Response * This week LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg finally issued a response to repeated faculty charges of "si- lence from above" regarding the shameful inquisition of sociology Pro- fessor David Goldberg on trumped- up charges of racial and sexual ha- rassment. Like the only other previ- ous public administrative response -which came from the now-resigned *chair of the Department of Sociology Howard Schuman - Dean Goldenberg criticized the manner in which the charges were brought, but Ostopped short of condemning the charges themselves. Inadequate as her response was, Dean Goldenberg was the first administrator to apologize to Goldberg for the unfair treatment he received a year ago. It is unfortunate that she could not muster the courage to defend the 37-year sociology vet- eran sooner and more forcefully. The incident began March 31, 01993 when a group of unnamed gradu- ate students distributed a letter accus- ing Goldberg of sexually and racially harassing students in his Statistics 510 course. It later came out that the students were not even in Goldberg's class, and their evidence was totally unconvincing. What made this incident so dis- turbing is that the dean, the provost, and even the chair of Goldberg's de- partment gave way to the charges before even consulting Goldberg for his side of the story. Schuman imme- diately buckled to the students and took away Goldberg's class. When Goldberg protested, Schuman split the class into two sections (with one section, presumably reserved for the non-racists, taught by another profes- sor). Dean Goldenberg said in an in- terview that Schuman contacted her soon after the charges were filed, and she encouraged him to continue in- vestigating. When the Goldberg affair came up at the May regents' meeting, Pro- vost Gilbert Whittaker raised other concerns about quality of Goldberg's teaching which were totally irrelevant to the charges at hand, and he failed to *roduce any evidence to back them up. It soon became evident that the harassment charges were fallacious - a May 17 letter supporting Goldberg bearing 59 mainly faculty signatures all but proved it. And with hindsight, almost anyone can recog- nize that anonymous accusations are a relic best left to the McCarthy era. But rather than apologizing and giv- 4g Goldberg his class back, the ad- ministration let the Goldberg affair drag on for a year. Now Dean Goldenberg has weighed in on the side of timidity. In her February 14 letter, she wrote that unsigned leaflets and ad hominem attacks do not constitute an appropri- ate way to raise issues on a University campus, and added, "I wish to make it clear that no finding was made of !acism or sexism on his part." Of course, this is already common knowledge, and hardly constitutes a stirring defense of her colleague in the face of the particularly insidious charges. Goldenberg also disputed charges of official silence by claiming Schuman "chastised the anonymous accusers for the manner in which they Orought those charges" and "used a powerful metaphor, likening the com- plaints ... to charges brought in the McCarthy era" in a letter to the Daily and a meeting with the students. Actually, all Schuman wrote was that he "regretted" that students didn't "feel it annrnnriate ornosible to brinoe Once upon a time, advertising was advertising, art was art, and never the twain did meet. No longer is this true. Today ... here have always been commercials. O At least for a generation weaned on tele vision, it seems like there've always been commercials. But advertising in the so-called age of information has become something its inventors could hardly have foreseen. At its best, today's advertising is deemed 'art' by its aficionados; at its worst it's simply blatantly manipulative. Has western culture sunk so low that groundbreaking artistic works are fashioned more with profit in mind than lofty ideals? Yeah, it has. But is it such a crime that art hasbecome so commercialized? With information traveling at a light- ening-fast pace across the entire planet, can today's artist be content with small, city-wide followings when it's feasible that millions of people can view an artist's work during every commercial break? Some would say it is a crime. That art should be 'Art' with a capital 'A' and should express all that is noble and romantic about the human soul. Art should move you to tears, goddammit! It should make you ap- preciate the slender beauty of a single flower-petal, not in- duce an intense crav- ing for Cheetos to start rumbling deep in your gut while you watch a hockey game. Unfortu - nately 'pure art' has become a By CHRIS LEPLEY phrase whispered with quiet cynicism by the public. And what the hell should art mean to us anyway? A poster of a big purple Georgia O'Keefe flower plastered on a door and covered with contact paper so your friends can write messages on it telling you to get your ass to dinner at six? My mother says that when I graduate from college I won't want to have posters on my walls any- more. Judging from the decor in her house that means I'll want crusty oil-paintings of indecipher- able landscapes with snow and wagon-wheels hung above the sofa. The day I hang a plastic' mandolin on my wall is the day I put a bullet in my head. Be it a mass-produced poster or an original hanging in Versailles, a DaVinci, as they say, is a DaVinci, and time has lent it the credibility of high art. But1 with the way television can create a fad, raise it to nationwide popu- larity in a day, then crush it like a nut in less time than it takes to press a button on the remote, we don't have time to create new DaVincis or Michaelangelos, and truthfully, no one seems to have the inclination, either. So where are all the artists, then? Well, it appears that they're either being advertised on those cheap "starving art- ist sale" commercials, or they're hard at work cre- ating computer software - to animate football play- ing beer bottles. Great strides have been made in the field of com- puter animation in the past few years, and the technology seems to be multi- II drink Coke. It's going toward morphing faces in music videos and shaving commercials. It's going toward annoying the hell out of you during commercial breaks during "Seinfeld." Not that there are no true innovations being made in the field of "pure art," but let's 'face it, the average couch potato American slob doesn't know from art; he or she knows television. So what's on television that could be considered art anyway? Not the programs, that's for sure. Al- though actors are art- ists in their own right - not to mention screenwriters, produc- ers, directors, etc. - I'd like to think that the people who make "Empty Nest" and "America's Funniest Home Videos" know exactly what it is that they're shoveling, and art it ain't. Of course there are worthwhile shows on television which raise the medium to new heights and ex- plore stunning issues of post modernism, most no- tably David Lynch's "Twin Peaks" and even currently running shows like "NYPD Blue," "The Simpsons," "Seinfeld" and "Homicide." But even if the programs you watch make pretensions toward art which somewhat hold water, the commercials that interrupt them certainly can't. The single biggest insult to the American tele- vision viewer is the rash of new commercials hyped before the Super Bowl each year. Even though the holiday season is dead and buried by the time that fatal Sunday rolls around, it is that day which is the pagan advertising industry's celebration of the fiscal new year. Hapless viewers are bombarded with "Bud Bowl XXIII" as well as whatever new multi-million dollar celebrity stroke-off Pepsi and Coke have come up with. The apocalypse must be on its way when we get commercials for upcoming com- mercials. I'm sure it's mentioned in Revela- tions somewhere. Of course "commercial" television isn't the only place where advertisers can reach the unsuspecting public. Everyone expects com- mercial breaks in TV, and can engage in a refreshing bit of pseudo-socialist rebellion by going to the bathroom during the break, en- abling yourself a moment of anti-capitalist eu- phoria as you walk back in and plop down on the couch, cackling triumphantly at the television "Haha! T don't lwa nt a ga , ,,sckfik Iwan'teven 3