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Philip L. White

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip Lloyd "Phil" White (July 31, 1923 – October 15, 2009) was an American history academic and civil community organizer. A tenured professor of early American history at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) from the 1960s through 2000, White is acknowledged by many citizens of Austin, Texas, to have been a primary architect of "the Democratic grass-roots political activism that transformed Austin politics in the late 1960s and early 1970s".[1]

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Transcription

I love cats. Everybody asks me if I have a cat and I say no but I do have a fluffy orange boyfriend named Mr. Howell. My name is Emily Graslie and I am the volunteer curatorial assistant here at the University of Montana Zoological Museum In this room alone we have about 21,000 specimens. Mammals are in the middle, the birds are around the perimeter. This is what we refer to as our "comparative collection." In fact the entire collection can be used for comparative reasons. We work with the forensic anthropologists and with the Montana State Crime Lab to help them identify random bones and faunal remains from sites all across the state. We have archeologists, who will go out on an archeological dig and find random bones and then bring them here and definitively say like 600 years ago somebody made an arrow sharpening shaft tool out of a white-tailed deer metapodial. And that's awesome. So, where I'm standing right now is what we refer to as the "sheep room" because the majority of the things in here are sheep and their skulls. We also refer to it as the "overflow skull storage room", which is kind of redundant 'cause the whole museum is basically overflow skull storage. In this room it's pretty much floor to ceiling of what I estimate to be a couple hundred bighorn sheep. We also have an entire moose and we have a horse in here and probably about two bison. And it's also where we keep our filing cabinet. So it's the office. This is the cold room and this is where we store the majority of our pelts that aren't in cabinets and it cuts down on bug infestations. You'll get things like dermestid beetles and carpet beetles that will eat these sort of things, so by keeping it refrigerated it cuts down on a lot of those problems. We have a ton of stuff in here, too. This is probably one of the most eclectic rooms of our collection, we have everything from these gigantic wolf pelts right here hanging from the ceiling, we have river otters and leopard seals and warthogs and primates, and gibbons and spider monkeys and anteaters and prehensile-tailed porcupines and a zebra. And a peacock. And leopard rugs. And a lot of really cool stuff that you will probably get to see sometime soon. It's not really ideal to have these kind of things stored in a cold room because it has to be refrigerated and if you can imagine things in your refrigerator going bad if you have a leak, animal pelts also go bad if you have a leak. So you can get moldy monkeys. That happened. Once. This is probably arguably my favorite room in the entire collection if not the whole universe of the world. This is what we call our "bird room". I think it's kind of obvious but in case you haven't noticed, it's a room full of live-mounted, taxidermied birds. And a racoon back here. Why is there a racoon in the bird room? Because I found that guy behind a cabinet a couple of months ago, so I took him out to take some pictures and then I didn't feel like putting him back in the dark depths of oblivion. We also have a bunny on the floor, but he's only got one ear. Gotta clean that up later. And this is our preparation lab. This is where all of the magic happens. Any kind of dry preparation like study skins happens on that table, brain removal happens in the sink, this right here is a freezer that is literally full of dead birds of all kinds of shapes and sizes and assortments. This is a refrigerator, which sometimes people forget, it's just a refrigerator, so stuff gets stinky in here. Back there is the mammal freezer. Right now there's a patagonian mara, which is the fourth largest rodent in the world, a bunch of bats and shrews and mice and the occasional wolf or coyote or fox, there're guinea pigs in there, too. I don't know. We just got those. This is where we put stuff when we want to get it clean, quickly. It is a colony full of flesh eating beetles. They will eat the flesh. Not off of living things. People ask me if I'm afraid I'm going to be eaten alive by a bunch of beetles, and that's not gonna happen. Before a skeleton can safely go into our collection, it has to first be run through the beetles to get all of the muscle tissue off of it. Because despite how good we might be with cleaning a skull, we can't do the work of a tiny, very itty bitty beetle, that will eat all of the little detail-y bits off of the bone. So these guys eat muscle tissue. And it's normally the larva that will eat all of it. The adults really don't eat anything, they basically just have sex and party in here all the time. Seriously, if you want to watch an orgy on campus, it is in here. Once again, my name is Emily, please subscribe to the channel and this is a brain scoop. It still has brains on it.

Early life

In New York City, White had been a community organizer with the West Side (Manhattan) branch of Americans for Democratic Action, while earning a PhD in colonial American history at Columbia University under the supervision of Allan Nevins. White essentially brought neighborhood civic groups to the American South.[2]

People's Republic

According to long-time Austin political consultant Peck Young, a former University of Texas student and White mentee circa 1968-71, Prof. White "made it possible for a lot of people to be elected and to do things to change this city" (Austin), from being "a Confederate capital into being something more progressive."[3] Between 1968 and 1971, Prof. White founded the Tarrytown Democrats and the West Austin Democrats and served as Faculty Advisor to the UT Young Democrats. During this period, he also served on the Travis County Democratic Executive Committee and chaired the UT Department of History during the summer months. He was thus in a rare position to oversee both the nascent neighborhood groups and the new student movements that were then forming in the wake of widespread Civil Rights and Vietnam War protests.[4] Even before the adoption of the 26th Amendment in 1971, a "first-ever political coalition" in Austin had been formed, joining "white liberals, minorities and students who had not been politically active before" in an amalgamation that opened up the city's formerly elitist politics.[3]

Peck Young, who became director of the Center for Public Policy & Political Studies at Austin Community College, stated that White provided vital support within the university for his group's registration of more than 40,000 new student voters in central Austin from 1971 to 1972 (in a city of then only approximately 250,000 people, and less than 100,000 regular voters).[5] From approximately 1970-75, local school board, city council, judicial, and state legislature offices changed, until nearly all elected offices in Travis County were in the hands of the new coalition, and other Texans started to refer to the state capital as "the People's Republic of Austin". In addition to Mr. Young, Prof. White advised a generation of Texas liberals hailing from UT Austin circa 1970, including Gonzalo Barrientos, Sarah Weddington, Ronnie Earle, Bruce Elfant, Larry Bales, and (future US Congressman) Lloyd Doggett.[6]

University pay dispute

Due to family concerns, White had largely faded out of county politics by the mid-1970s, although he continued advising student political groups and organizing the Texas Association of College Teachers (TACT). It was also during the early-to-mid-'70s that the University of Texas Board of Regents shifted from the Chairmanship of Frank Erwin to that of former Texas governor Allan Shivers.[7] In 1975 White and a number of other politically active UT Austin professors "sued the university and President Lorene Rogers, alleging they were denied full salary increases for which they had been recommended in 1975 in retaliation for their political activities",[3] according to White's then-attorney, David Richards, husband of future Texas governor Ann Richards.

Although a Texas district court initially ruled in favor of the University, White's appeal that he had been discriminated against, in regards to First Amendment faculty rights, was approved by the US 5th Circuit Court in 1981:

The plaintiffs alleged that this salary action was taken in retaliation against their exercise of their first amendment right to freedom of speech and association. After a bench trial, the district court ruled that the plaintiffs were not entitled to the requested injunctive, declaratory, and monetary relief. Contending that the district court's finding that the plaintiffs had failed to prove retaliatory intent was clearly erroneous, three of the plaintiffs, Professors White, Gavenda, and Shepley, now bring this appeal. We find that the district court's decision was clearly erroneous only with respect to plaintiff-appellant White.[8]

Nationality in world history

The common ground between White's scholarship on early America and his civic political activism was more fully elaborated with his founding of an upper-division course at the University of Texas in the early 1970s called "Nationality in World History." The course examined the global history of how different sovereign nations came into being throughout history. White taught this course for nearly thirty years. After withdrawing from Austin politics in the 1970s, and from university politics in the 1980s, White concentrated primarily on this course and its scholarship for the last two decades of his life. In the words of colleague Michael Hall:

"Phil devoted his last years to investigating the roots of nationalism." This research took him back into the evolution of group instincts in Homo sapiens and the burgeoning field of sociobiology. Phil plunged in relentlessly and took no easy escapes from the rigours of exacting scholarship".[9]

Unlike most scholars of nationalism, White chose not to view the topic through ethnic-tinted lenses, but preferred an anthropological, long-term view of the subject: the overall history of the phenomenon of group formation (and maintenance) in our species.[10]

Upon retiring, White founded and organized the "World 2000: Teaching World History & World Geography" conference, in conjunction with the World History Association.[11] Keynote speakers included personal friend and former colleague William Hardy McNeill, fellow Columbia alumnus Immanuel Wallerstein, and slave-trade historian Philip D. Curtin.

In his final decade, White often collaborated with the renowned British global historian A.G. Hopkins. White's chapter in Hopkins' edited book [Global History: Interactions Between the Universal and the Local] pointed out that, in the words of one reviewer from London, "ethnicity has never been foundational for the development of viable states".[12] The chapter generated high marks from others as well. Hopkins recalls when one of his former colleagues at the University of Cambridge told him that White's essay "was read by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair to prepare for a visit to Africa to address the continent's problems".[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Castillo, Juan (2009). "Philip White was an 'unsung hero' in transforming the city's Democratic politics", Austin American-Statesman, October 17, 2009
  2. ^ Young, Peck (2010-02-19). "Peck Young Interview at Bee Caves IHOP".
  3. ^ a b c (Castillo, 2009)
  4. ^ (Young, 2010, 18:00-19:00)
  5. ^ (Young, 2010, 21:00-26:00)
  6. ^ (Young, 2010, 32:34-33:50)
  7. ^ "Former Regents - Decade", utsystem.edu.
  8. ^ Edwin B. ALLAIRE, et al., Plaintiffs, Philip White, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Lorene L. ROGERS, et al., Defendants-Appellees. United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit October 13, 1981, 658 F.2d 1055 [1]
  9. ^ a b "UT College of Liberal Arts". www.utexas.edu. Archived from the original on 2009-11-25.
  10. ^ "Nationality in World History". nationalityinworldhistory.net.
  11. ^ "H-Announce | H-Net". networks.h-net.org.
  12. ^ O'Brien, Patrick. "Review of Global History: Interactions between the Universal and the Local".

External links

This page was last edited on 22 December 2023, at 09:20
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