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Why Can’t They “Just Get Along”? V-Day meets P-Day on campus. [Penis Monologues]
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/sommers200505020808.asp ^ | May 02, 2005, 8:08 a.m. | Christina Hoff Sommers

Posted on 05/02/2005 5:56:53 PM PDT by Diago

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Why Can&#8217;t They &#8220;Just Get Along&#8221;?
V-Day meets P-Day on campus.

By Christina Hoff Sommers

Warning:The following contains adult (in this case, collegiate) language, along with gratuitous references to male and female genitalia.

College administrators have been enthusiastic supporters Eve Ensler’s play The Vagina Monologues and schools across the nation celebrate “V-Day” (short for Vagina Day) every year. But when the College Republicans at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island rained on the celebrations of V-Day by inaugurating Penis Day and staging a satire called The Penis Monologues, the official reaction was horror. Two participating students, Monique Stuart and Andy Mainiero, have just received sharp letters of reprimand and have been placed on probation by the Office of Judicial Affairs. The costume of the P-Day “mascot” — a friendly looking “penis” named Testaclese, has been confiscated and is under lock and key in the office of the assistant dean of student affairs, John King.

The P-Day satirists are the first to admit that their initiative is tasteless and crude. But they rightly point out that V-Day is far more extreme. They are shocked that the administration has come down hard on their good-natured spoof, when all along it has been completely accommodating to the in-your-face vulgarity of the vagina activists.

V-Day has now replaced Valentine’s Day on more than 500 college campuses (including Catholic ones). The high point of the day is a performance of Ensler’s raunchy play, which consists of various women talking in graphic, and I mean graphic, terms about their intimate anatomy. The play is poisonously anti-male. Its only romantic scene, if you can call it that, takes place when a 24-year-old woman seduces a young girl (in the original version she was 13 years old, but in a more recent version is played as a 16-year-old.) The woman invites the girl into her car, takes her to her house, plies her with vodka, and seduces her. What might seem like a scene from a public-service kidnapping-prevention video shown to schoolchildren becomes, in Ensler’s play “a kind of heaven.”

The week before V-Day, the Roger Williams campus was plastered with flyers emblazoned with slogans such as “My Vagina is Flirty” and “My Vagina is Huggable.” There was a widely publicized “orgasm workshop.” On the day of the play, the V-warriors sold lollipops in the in the shape of–-guess what? Last year, the student union was flooded with questionnaires asking unsuspecting students questions like “What does your Vagina smell like?” None of this offended the administration or elicited any reprimands, probations, or confiscations.

The campus conservatives artfully (in the college sense of "artful") mimicked the V-Day campaign. They papered the school with flyers that said, “My penis is majestic” and “My penis is hilarious.” The caption on one handout read, “My Penis is studious.” It showed Testaclese reclining on a couch reading Michael Barone’s Hard America, Soft America.

“Testaclese” tipped the scales when he approached the university Provost, Edward J. Kavanagh, outside the student union. Apparently taking him/it for a giant mushroom, Provost Kavanagh cheerfully greeted him. But when Testaclese presented him with an honorary award as a campus “Penis Warrior,” the stunned official realized that it was no mushroom. After this incident, which was recorded on videotape, the promoters of P-Day were ordered to cease circulating their flyers and to keep Testaclese off campus grounds. Mindful of how school officers had never once protested any of the antics of Vagina warriors, the P-warriors did not comply. The Testaclese costume was then confiscated and formal charges followed.

It is easy to understand why school officials would not want a six-foot phallus wandering around campus; nor why they would ask students not to paper the college with posters describing all the things it likes to do. But that is just the sort of thing the vagina warriors have been doing, year after year, on hundreds of campuses. In fact, P-Day at Roger Williams was mild by comparison. Wesleyan College hosted a “C***” workshop; Penn State held a “C***”-fest. At Arizona State, students displayed a 40-foot inflatable plastic vagina. It was not confiscated and no one was ever threatened with probation.

Unhappily, P-Day may be the only effective means of countering V-Day with all its c-fests, graphic lollipops, intrusive questionnaires, outsized effigies of vaginas and its thematic anti-male play. The prospect of public readings from P-Monologues on campuses around the country just might be the reductio ad absurdum that could drive the vagina warriors to the bargaining table. The student activists opposed to V-Day will gladly cancel P-Day the moment the V-warriors abandon their vagina–fests.

But for the short term, college administrators should brace themselves. The rebels at Roger Williams are talking about a Free Testaclese Fund. And word is spreading to other campuses. P-Day and Testaclese will be back next year. And not just in Rhode Island.

Christina Hoff Sommers is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. She is the co-author of One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Undermines Self-Reliance, just out from St. Martin’s Press.


 

 
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/sommers200505020808.asp
     



TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; General Discusssion; Humor
KEYWORDS: academia; academialist; homosexualagenda; homosexuallist; monologues; pday; porn; vaginamonologues; vday
And let us not forget the "Queer Monologues" at the Jeuit college out aside Cleveland, John Carroll University

:

http://carrollnewsonline.com/files.php?id=226

JCU Allies celebrate ‘coming out’

Written by: Lindsay LeCorchick on Oct 09, 2003 Total Views: 81
Last Modified: Oct 08, 2003     Article Status: archived

Three years ago, one John Carroll organization broke the old-fashioned, conservative Catholic mold to which this campus has grown accustomed.

Allies, the gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, transgender (GLBT) and friends of the GLBT community began to falter last year due to declining memebership, but the group is now back in full force for the 2003-2004 school year.

The main goal of this student organization, which is comprised of one-third gay and two-thirds straight members, is to “provide a support network between homo and heterosexual communities” on campus, according to senior Owen Baker, Allies’ vice-president.

He said this network is important to the GLBT community, especially at this small university.

“The problem is, there’s not a huge community,” said Baker. He notes that while security for gay college students is not as big of a concern today as it may have been in the past, it is still something that students have to think about, especially in the residence halls.

Baker added that most of the resistance Allies has encountered from the JCU community has been from faculty members.

Students have been “amazingly accepting,” however, there are some professors at this Jesuit university who are not “men and women for others,” he said.

For example, Baker related an instance that happened to an Allies member in which a professor allegedly made an off-color comment that “all fags are going to burn in Hell anyway.”

It is that kind of stark reminder, however infrequent they may be, that reinforces the need for close friends and a support system that is Allies.

“What’s really exciting about Allies this year, is that they’re making a concerted effort to educate everyone,” said Monica Marcelis-Fochtman, assistant director of Student Activities.

She added that this group is essentially educating students, faculty and staff about the different culture that is constructed by their sexuality.

Part of JCU’s mission is to lead and serve men and women, according to Marcelis-Fochtman. Allies does this by example, and by educating, as well as by addressing pertinent justice issues.

Baker stresses the fact that two-thirds of the club’s members are straight, hence the name of the club, and they are simply friends of the GLBT community.

“People who would be Allies are afraid of that stigma,” Baker says of the once in a while security concerns. “It makes you really enjoy the support of the people who are willing to be there.”

It is also important to remember that the majority of the JCU community, including the administration, is behind Allies, which makes it possible to promote itself positively, such as some of the club’s upcoming events.

After JCU’s first ever drag show two years ago was almost cancelled due to “gossip” and false rumors, Baker said.

The approximately 25 member club is making their presence known this semester by holding weekly meetings Wednesday nights.

These meetings are currently being used to discuss the preliminary stages of planning a Jesuit GLBT conference at JCU. The group also hosts a weekly get together on Tuesday nights.

And their biggest event for the semester is just about to take place. The “Queer Monologues,” a new spin on the famous “Vagina Monologues” will wrap up this year’s “Coming Out Week” for Allies.

This play, written, produced and starring members of the organization, consists of “coming out” stories and other “queer” anecdotes to educate members of the JCU community and stand up against stereotypes, Baker said.

Baker explained that these stories are not all the same and vary according to person and situation.

“You may know one person who is gay,” he said. “But here are all these different people.”

He also added that the stories are for both heterosexuals and homosexuals and are not “overpowering for one group.”


7 posted on 03/24/2004 4:08:06 PM PST by Diago

1 posted on 05/02/2005 5:56:54 PM PDT by Diago
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To: Coleus

bump


2 posted on 05/02/2005 5:57:46 PM PDT by Diago
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To: Diago

Multiple duplicate post!

Use Search!

Jeeze!


3 posted on 05/02/2005 5:57:54 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (First you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women (HJ Simpson))
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To: freedumb2003

Actually, I put the title in verbatim and nothing showed up.


4 posted on 05/02/2005 5:58:51 PM PDT by Diago
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To: freedumb2003

It may have been the way I copy and pasted the title into the search. Once the punctuation is removed, the other posts do show up.

By the way, relax...


5 posted on 05/02/2005 6:01:12 PM PDT by Diago
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To: Diago

lol


6 posted on 05/02/2005 6:01:51 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (First you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women (HJ Simpson))
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To: Diago
"The costume of the P-Day “mascot” — a friendly looking “penis” named Testaclese, ... The campus conservatives artfully (in the college sense of "artful") mimicked the V-Day campaign. They papered the school with flyers that said, “My penis is majestic” and “My penis is hilarious.” The caption on one handout read, “My Penis is studious.” It showed Testaclese reclining on a couch reading Michael Barone’s Hard America, Soft America."

Now THAT is FUNNY.

I can see why the humorless BOOBS were upset.

The V monologues is lesbian/feminist indoctrination, Cultural marxism made attractive by dint of being somewhat pornographic.

7 posted on 05/02/2005 6:31:32 PM PDT by WOSG (Liberating Iraq - http://freedomstruth.blogspot.com)
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To: Diago

Testaclese?! ROTFLMAO!!!!


8 posted on 05/02/2005 9:52:31 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (.:: "Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing away, and he gives you everything." ::.)
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To: Diago

this is the funniest article in National Review I've ever read.


9 posted on 05/03/2005 8:00:59 AM PDT by sassbox
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