Ms. Click is making $57,000 taxpayer dollars a year. She resigned only from her honorary position (resume filler) gig as an associate professor. She kept her paying job with the University.
That hideous thing is married?
Beginning to get the idea that the title of “professor” now comes on cereal box tops? (At least for “Communication, etc departments.)
I always thought marriage was the oppression of women.
Or in other words, slink away and hope that nobody noticed him there contributing to the fiasco.
Mr. Click er Ms Clicks Low T Husband is Richard J. âChipâ Callahan. Chip is a professor and chair of religious studies at the university.
How Nice.
Janna Basler, director of Greek life and leadership on campus, hunkered down at home Tuesday, and refused to answer questions about her role in the jacobin mess that was caught on video.
That is the most retarded protest I have ever seen.
Isn’t that what their Great Helmsman ordered them to do: “Get in their faces.”?
(Husband of Melissa Click) Richard “Chip” Callahan - chairs Mizzou’s religious studies department. Hmmm, I seem to recall that the “Callahan” name is a Democrat political power family in that area. Don’t know if there is ANY RELATIONSHIP in that last name!
Bookmark
her husband, Richard "Chip" Callahan, chairman of the Religious Studies Department
Richard J. Callahan, Jr.
Richard J. Callahan, Jr. Associate Professor and Chair
Education: Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara
Interest: Religion in America
Email: callahanrj@missouri.edu
Phone: 573-882-0060
Research
My primary interest is religion in America. These are especially interesting times for the study of religion in the United States as the discipline searches for new ways to tell the story of the nation’s complex history of religious diversity and cultural interaction. Trained in folk studies, history of religion, sociology of religion, and American religious history, I approach religion through its lived expressions and practices. I am particularly interested in the ways that people creatively and constantly negotiate identity, significance, and power through religious idioms in the dense contexts of their everyday lives. Similarly, I am interested in the new and often surprising forms of religious expression that emerge in unexpected times and places as individuals and communities negotiate the ordinary and extraordinary experiences that make up all of our lives.
My research follows these interests into the world of work and labor, exploring how particular occupational cultures, material settings, and relations of exchange inform and are informed by religious idioms. My first book about this subject was a study of coal miners in eastern Kentucky that looked at a variety of ways that miners and their families responded religiously to the introduction of industrial coal mining into their lives. I am currently engaged in a long-term research project on the religious worlds of seafaring, focusing initially on New England’s whaling industry. This project takes me into realms of globalization, oceanic studies, and intercultural exchanges between Americans, Pacific Islanders, and others. It explores not only the work of whaling, but the impact of global networks and exchanges on formations of modern perspectives on religion as well.
Teaching
2230 Religion and Popular Culture
3210 History of Religion in Post-Civil War America
4130 Haunting and Healing: The Supernatural in American Culture
4210/7810 African-American Religions
8005 Ethnographic History
8440 Religion, Globalization, and Local Cultures
http://religiousstudies.missouri.edu/people/faculty/callahanrj.shtml
Janna Basler, director of Greek life and leadership on campus, also is seen in the video confronting Tai. When he asks her name, she replies: "I am Concerned Student 1950," the name of the student group at the center of the protests. The name refers to the first year that black students were admitted to the university.
Can we have some muscle over in Missouri, please?
Some muscle? Anyone?
Mizzou's #1 & #2 stepped down.
Instead of hiring more jellyfish as replacements, can we instead see someone with muscle?
Like some campus admins who aren't afraid to "use muscle" and threaten to sack any of the pampered, full-scholarship football players if they carry out their threat to break their contracts?
Some muscle, please?
Hello? Anyone?
[crickets chirping]
OMG! Someone actually married her?
Good luck finding muscle among liberal, metrosexual anarchists.