Tipsters,
The marvelous Wm. James quote about "tenderness" does not come from "The
Moral Equivalent of War, and Professor Pajares has fixed that on his
excellent James web site.  It is, as he says below from Talks to Teachers.

Al

Al L. Cone
Jamestown College   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
North Dakota  701.252.3467   X 2604
http://www.jc.edu/users/faculty/cone

The Internet is democracy at its ugliest. Apologies to Paddy Chayefsky who
said this about television


-----Original Message-----
From: Prof. Frank Pajares [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, March 20, 2000 6:27 AM
To: Al Cone
Subject: Tenderness/Moral Equivalent...?


Dear Al -

I just don't know what got into me when I created that particular page.
That is one of my favorite quotes, and I cite it in various articles. It's
from Talks to Teachers, pp. 51-51. I must have been doing something with
the Moral Equivalent of War when I created that page.

Thanks for pointing it out. I've fixed it.

And thank you for the nice words about the site.

Frank

On Sat, 18 Mar 2000, Al Cone wrote:

> Professor Pajares,
> Your James site is excellent, but I have a quibble.
> The wonderful "tenderness" quote says it is from the Moral Equivalent of
War
> speech, but the text of that speech which you cite, does not contain the
> tenderness passage.
> 
> Al L. Cone, Ph.D.        Professor & Chair
> Department of Psychology      6019 College Lane
> Jamestown College      Jamestown, ND  58405
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://www.jc.edu/users/faculty/cone
> (701) 252-3467  X 2604
> 
> The Internet is democracy at its ugliest.  Apologies to Paddy Chayefsky
who
> said the same about television
> 

_______________________________

Prof. Frank Pajares
Division of Educational Studies
1784 N. Decatur Rd., Suite 240
Emory University
Atlanta, GA  30322

Tel: (404) 727-1775
Fax: (404) 727-2799
http://www.emory.edu/EDUCATION/mfp

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