100th Post

2. 100 (number) from Wikipedia
3. Top 100 Videos, Google Beta
4. MIT’s 100 Dollar Laptop
5. Living to 100 Life Expectancy Calculator
6. Time’s Top 100 People
7. Top 100 April Fools Hoaxes
8. 100 milestone documents of American history
9. IMDb Bottom 100
10. Top 100 Network Security Tools

11. 100 Best Companies to Work For 2007
12. Here are the 100 words most often misspelled (‘misspell’ is one of them).
13. World’s Top 100 Wonders
14. Celebrity 100: Forbes
15. The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990–2000: American Library Association
16. Top 100 Downloaded Books, Project Gutenburg
17. The Billboard Hot 100
18. XtremeTop100.com – Gaming top 100 list
19. Top 100 Bloggers.com
20. 100 Reasons You’ll Be Speechless (Windows Vista)

21. QDB Admin Top 100 Quotes
22. American Rhetoric: Top 100 Speeches
23. The IT 100 Companies: The Leading Tech Companies of 2005
24. 100 Mile Diet: Local Eating for Global Change
25. NASDAQ-100 Dynamic Heatmap
26. Messier 100
27. 100 Words
28. 100 Best Novels
29. 100 Black Men of America, Inc.
30. Committee of 100

31. 100 Years of New York City
32. The 100: A Ranking Of The Most Influential Persons In History: (Paperback)
33. 100% Campaign
34. 100 Oldest Currently Registered Domains
35. Michael Light: 100 Suns
36. Top 100 Lyrics
37. Club 100: A Model 100 User Group
38. 100 Girls
39. CNET’s Top 100 Products
40. Michael Light / 100 Suns

41. Micro 100 Tool Company
42. Top 100 Feeds
43. Top 100 Electronic Recruiters
44. Film 100
45. Top 100 Education Blogs
46. NEA: Top 100 Books for Children Top 100 Books
47. 100 Bloggers
48. Top 100 Global Universities
49. 100 Mysteries of the Century
50. World Chess: Top 100 Players

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Atheistis!

I am an English teacher, and I was taught my methods in the ‘age of the argument’ (the 90s English department) so I hope I can be forgiven a small indulgence. Still, I think this is a great example of an argument.

It’s funny, and it clearly has a point of view, but it is also interested in a kind of critical engagement with a range of issues related to atheism. He’s doing much more than simply ranting against anti-atheist bias. He has four of these video-arguments so far, all of which you can watch at CoffeeGhost.net.

Adieu Chief Illiniwek

As the honored symbol of the University of Illinois and the State of Illinois’ most visible representation of its Native heritage, Chief Illiniwek has proudly and majestically represented the University and the State for over 70 years. The Chief Illiniwek Educational Foundation strives to utilize the presence of Chief Illiniwek to promote greater education and awareness of American Indian people, culture, tradition, and history to the students, alumni, and friends of the University of Illinois.

from the Chief Illiniwek Educational Foundation

On the morning of Friday, February 16th, University of Illinois Board chairman Lawrence Eppley announced the end of the racist “Chief Illiniwek” tradition. The “Chief” has served as the symbol and mascot of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for eighty years. In 1989, a grassroots movement began for the complete elimination of the inappropriate tradition and the use of race-based imagery. After a long struggle, both the University’s academic and athletic credentials were challenged for carrying on such a tradition. Most recently, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) put the University of a short list of schools who could not host post-season tournaments due to the NCAA’s restrictions on the use of Native American imagery.

from the Progressive Resource / Action Cooperative

Chief Illiniwek is an official symbol of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign that has been associated with the University’s intercollegiate athletic programs since the Twenties, and will be retired after a final performance at a Men’s Basketball game on February 21 versus Michigan. The Chief has generally been portrayed by a white student dressed in Native American regalia who performs dances during halftime of Illinois football and basketball games, as well as during women’s volleyball matches (although three students of non white descent, Mike Gonzalez, and Johnny Saputo who are Latino and Steve Raquel who is of Filipino descent have also portrayed Illiniwek).

from Wikipedia, on February 17

I am not sure what could possibly be written about this issue, except maybe to be thankful that the entire thing is over. It has had a freakishly long run for something that ought to have been pretty obvious. I keep thinking of those “Inky Racer” ads that they still sell on Ebay. (You can find an image of one here, thanks to Miscellany.com.)

The “Chief” came from the same noble-savage milieu that brought us the Boy Scouts, eugenics, and eventually the S.A.T. Personally, I saw the “Chief” perform once in person and calling his “traditional dance” weird is an understatement. The S.A.T. is on its last legs (yet standardized testing and its residual Eugenics has its own strange longevity), the Boy Scouts are homophobic, but at least the Chief will retire this week.

I have to say, though, the range of rhetoric generated in this debate is fascinating, from the banal education timber of the Foundation, to the collegiate left-righteousness of the Cooperative, to the bland neutrality of the sure-to-be-contentious Wikipedia article. And, of course, the story was apparently broken by a blog called IlliniPundit.com.