Kentucky: White Washing Begins at the University of Louisville

PageOneKentucky.com: White Washing Begins at the University of Louisville

The Courier-Journal’s latest update on the Robert Felner scandal at the University of Louisville reveals that the chairman of the Board of Trustees wrote a letter saying he is satisfied with the actions taken by the university’s leadership regarding faculty complaints and the Felner investigation.

Seriously. After all of the super-negative news coverage and after all the negative facts about dozens and dozens of grievances and complaints. After UofL President Jim Ramsey called them “anonymous crap” and never apologized. After we have repeatedly published information painting a less-than-stable situation among the university’s leadership team, that is what the chairman had to say.

And Nancy Rodriguez doesn’t even bother to use the hundreds of email messages we published that proves otherwise.

You can pretty much bet that nothing is changing within the unversity. So don’t hold your breath.

Kentucky: Trustee chief backs U of L leaders in Felner inquiry

Courier-Journal: Trustee chief backs U of L leaders in Felner inquiry

Porter ‘satisfied’ on Felner inquiry

The chairman of the University of Louisville board of trustees sent a letter to the full board this week saying he is “satisfied” with actions taken by the school’s administration regarding faculty complaints and a federal investigation involving former education dean Robert Felner.

“We care about our employees — they are a source of our pride,” J. Chester Porter said in the letter. “We have worked with (U of L President) Jim (Ramsey) and (Provost) Shirley (Willihnganz) long enough to know they, too, care deeply about the welfare of all the University’s employees and students.”

Porter acknowledges in his letter that “given issues raised in the media, there is little doubt that Dean Felner’s personality may have accelerated the departure of some of the faculty.”

He then says that during Felner’s five-year tenure, Ramsey and Willihnganz “began to understand the tensions he created in the college” and notes it was the university’s investigation that “alerted the U.S. Attorney to investigate peculiarities” in the College of Education and Human Development.

Felner, who resigned from the university June 30 to take a chancellor position at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside that he later backed out of, is the focus of a federal investigation sparked by his possible misappropriation of a $694,000 federal grant.

Scholar of Higher Education Named General Secretary of the AAUP

The Chronicle: Scholar of Higher Education Named General Secretary of the AAUP

Gary Rhoades will be the first scholar of higher education to head the office of the nation’s largest faculty association. The American Association of University Professors is expected to announce today that he will take over as its general secretary in January.

Mr. Rhoades has spent his entire 22-year career at the University of Arizona studying issues that affect the professoriate. He directs Arizona’s Center for the Study of Higher Education. Leaders of the AAUP hope his expertise will bring a depth of knowledge to the group and put him in a good position to help guide it through its centennial year, in 2015.

Iraqi university president accused of aiding al-Qaida

The Herald: 2 Iraqi officials accused of aiding al-Qaida

BAGHDAD—A university president and a top local official in a restive province north of Baghdad are suspected of giving weapons and government cars to al-Qaida in Iraq insurgents, according to arrest reports obtained Wednesday.

The leak of the reports appeared aimed, in part, at countering claims by Sunni Muslim politicians that Shiite-led security forces arrested the two—both Sunnis—on political grounds in Diyala province.

University in India sets up shop in US

Herald-Mail: India-based university buys former Allegheny Energy HQ

WASHINGTON COUNTY — The former Allegheny Energy headquarters on Downsville Pike has been purchased by a university based in India.

Vinayaka Missions America University Inc. finalized the purchase of the building and surrounding 45-acre site Tuesday for $8.5 million.

The university plans to open its first campus in the U.S. there, officials from the university announced at a press conference at the Washington County Administration Building hours after closing on the sale.

First a secret $300K bonus; Now a $1 million buy out for UCA prez?

KFSM: UCA board to meet to discuss Hardin’s future

Associated Press – August 27, 2008 6:44 PM ET

LITTLE ROCK (AP) – The University of Central Arkansas Board of Trustees will meet Thursday to discuss the future of embattled president Lu Hardin, who has faced questions after he was awarded a $300,000 bonus in secret last spring.

Rush F. Harding III, vice chairman of the board, said Wednesday that the panel would meet at 11 a.m. on the UCA campus at Conway to discuss Hardin’s future but did not know whether Hardin planned to resign his post.

Arkansas Times: Hardin to resign?

We just heard from a UCA faculty member who says that UCA President Lu Hardin has decided to resign on a $1 million buyout. Hardin had four years left on his contract.

UCA spokesman Warwick Sabin said that he hadn’t heard that Hardin was going to resign as of 4:30 p.m. today.

Hardin is scheduled to speak to the UCA faculty tomorrow at 1:40 p.m. Faculty president Kurt Boniecki said that he hadn’t heard about the resignation either, and added that Hardin’s beginning-of-semester meeting with faculty and staff is an annual event that has been on the schedule for a while. We have calls in to both Hardin’s office and to UCA board of trustees member Rush Harding. Stay tuned.

AAUP Turns to Scholar of Higher Education

Inside Higher Ed: AAUP Turns to Scholar of Higher Education

If the American Association of University Professors set out to find a scholar to analyze its situation, Gary Rhoades probably would have been someone to talk to. Director of the Center for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Arizona, Rhoades is an expert on faculty-administrator relations, faculty unions and the economic status of professors.

Rhoades is the author of Managed Professionals: Unionized Faculty and Restructuring Academic Labor (SUNY Press) and co-author of Academic Capitalism and the New Economy: Markets, State, and Higher Education (Johns Hopkins University Press). Today the AAUP is announcing that Rhoades will be its next general secretary. Much of his work looks critically at the way new economic models in higher education have been used to change and in some cases limit faculty roles and rights.

Kentucky: Felner’s follies – Former U of L dean Robert Felner racked up grievances, not grants

LEO Weekly: Felner’s follies – Former U of L dean Robert Felner racked up grievances, not grants

When Robert Felner arrived at the University of Louisville in 2003, he brought with him a reputation as a “rainmaker.” University administrators praised the former dean as a change agent, citing him as the driving force behind a spike in grant money at the school.

In fact, even after federal prosecutors began investigating Felner for possibly mishandling hundreds of thousands of dollars in grant money, university president James Ramsey repeatedly reminded critics that under the former dean’s leadership, the College of Education and Human Development saw “an increase in grants and contracts from $4.2 million … to more than $40 million.”

But a recent review of public records obtained by LEO Weekly reveals Felner is directly responsible for only a fraction of that windfall.

It appears Felner was only personally involved — as either director or co-director of specific grant proposals — in bringing in about $1 million in total grants during his tenure, according to documents the university turned over in response to an open records request. That total includes a $694,400 No Child Left Behind grant the feds are now investigating. Most of that grant was funneled to a defunct nonprofit headed by a longtime friend and former associate of Felner.

A Much-Awaited Inside Look at the Communication of former dean Robert Felner, President Jim Ramsey and Provost Shirley Willihnganz – Or How to Make the University of Louisville Look As Bad As Possible

PageOneKetucky.com: A Much-Awaited Inside Look at the Communication of Robert Felner, Jim Ramsey and Shirley Willihnganz – Or How to Make the University of Louisville Look As Bad As Possible

We told you a few months ago that the federal investigation involving Robert Felner at the University of Louisville was going to get messy. And we never disappoint when we make a declaration like that.

Over the past month we have obtained hundreds of pages of email from the university and we’re bringing many of them to you today. Some are long and drawn out so we’ll try to offer the most basic of summarizations. And we’ll break things out into category and circumstance for easier consumption.

So have at it, folks. Read, consume, digest, regurgitate. If anyone in the traditional media wants to use these records, they’re yours for the taking if you properly source this website.

Incompetence Tops List of Complaints About Peer Reviewers

The Chronicle: Incompetence Tops List of Complaints About Peer Reviewers

Incompetence by their reviewers was the most common problem reported by scientists who submitted manuscripts to scholarly journals. Almost two-thirds voiced that beef in a survey administered to scientists employed by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

The supposedly expert reviewers, scientists complained, had not carefully read articles, were unfamiliar with the subject matter, or made mistakes of fact or reasoning. The survey results, the first of their kind, were reported in the September issue of the journal Science and Engineering Ethics.

Ky. Supreme Court says U of L must ID donors

Courier-Journal: Ky. Supreme Court says U of L must ID donors

No anonymous gifts allowed in future

The Kentucky Supreme Court has ruled the University of Louisville must disclose the names of thousands of people who have donated money to the school through the U of L Foundation.
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Ruling in a challenge by The Courier-Journal, the state Supreme Court found that because the foundation is a public agency, some 47,000 individual donors whose names have been withheld must be disclosed.

Kentucky Supreme Court Orders Release of Donor Names

The Chronicle: Kentucky Supreme Court Says Foundation Must Release Donor Names

The Supreme Court of Kentucky has ruled that the University of Louisville must disclose the names of 47,000 donors to the University of Louisville Foundation because the foundation is a public agency and the public’s interest in how the institution’s fund-raising arm operates outweighs concerns for donors’ privacy.

The ruling, issued last Thursday, caps a seven-year legal battle between the foundation and The Courier-Journal, a Louisville newspaper that sued to obtain the names in 2001 under the state’s open-records law. The foundation had denied the newspaper’s request for information on donors to the McConnell Center for Political Leadership. Kentucky’s senior U.S. senator, Mitch McConnell, a Republican, helped found the center.

Canada does not protect academic freedom? What a load of bupkes

The Globe and Mail: Canada does not protect academic freedom? What a load of bupkes

CLIFFORD ORWIN

Canadians rarely concern themselves with the internal quarrels of American scholarly associations, nor should we. Such disputes are always tempests in teapots, and why care about turbulence in teapots not even our own?

But here’s a case where we are at least nominally the subject of such a quarrel. The American Political Science Association, one of the largest of the academic professional associations, is scheduled to hold its 2009 annual meeting in Toronto. This would be its first meeting in Canada, indeed its first outside the United States. There are many Canadian members of APSA (this writer included), and the decision to meet in Toronto was a tribute to Canada’s contributions to the political science profession.

Almost certainly, the meeting will proceed as scheduled, if only because it’s too late for APSA to move it. Be this as it may, the site is now under challenge. Tomorrow, on the eve of this year’s annual meeting in Boston, the council of APSA will consider a petition alleging that Canada does not protect academic freedom.

As the petitioners present Canada, it is subject to a reign of terror due to the excesses of human-rights commissions. What fun would a scholarly meeting be if you couldn’t impugn gay rights or Islamic extremism, and the human-rights commissions are alleged to have rendered this intolerably risky. No sooner will you deliver your paper than you’ll be dragged off to the commission hoosegow. The petition would require the APSA leadership to seek assurances from the Canadian government that academic freedom will be protected.

How thoughtful of the Americans to be committed to democracy promotion even in Canada. When I first heard of this petition, my eyes misted over – until I reflected that it was all a load of bupkes.

I loathe human-rights commissions as much as anyone. They are an excrescence on our body politic, and they make Canada a less free society, not a freer one. Their procedures are grossly unfair, placing intolerable pressures, financial and otherwise, on defendants to settle their cases even where they are innocent. They represent a malign bureaucracy run wild. There are other legal avenues for pursuing issues of discrimination, and any federal government with guts would at the very least rein in these commissions.

But this is for Canadians to worry about. Americans should stick to their own worries. The petitioners’ claim that human-rights commissions pose a threat to them is bogus. How many international scholarly conferences are held in Canada each year and no repercussions whatsoever? How many controversial guest speakers have I myself sponsored, many on the supposedly taboo issue of Islamic extremism?

When promoters of this petition approached me, apparently expecting me to sign it, I asked them whether they could adduce a single instance of the abridgment of academic freedom in Canada. They could not. Canada’s record on academic freedom is exemplary. In political science, empirical evidence is supposed to matter; it has made no impression on the signers of this gasbag of a petition.

In fact, the signers neither know much about Canada nor care about it. They made no serious attempt to consult their Canadian colleagues. Many of them seem to think human-rights commissions are criminal courts in which the government brings charges against defendants. They haven’t even looked into the question of whether any human-rights commission has ever claimed jurisdiction over visiting foreigners.

So what’s really going on? Internal APSA politics. In recent years, the question of location has become politicized, first by the left and now, in revenge, by the right. Presumably, the petition will fail. The signers have warned that, if it does, they will boycott next year’s meeting. They will remain safely where they are – the few, the proud, the cowering. If they make good on this fearsome threat, I will look forward to not seeing them. Yankee stay home.

Free expression, my signatory friends, free expression. Surely I have as much right to defend Canada as you to traduce it.

Clifford Orwin is professor of political science at the University of Toronto and distinguished visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution

Yet Another Political-Science Conference Site Comes Under Scrutiny

The Chronicle News Blog: Yet Another Political-Science Conference Site Comes Under Scrutiny

As the American Political Science Association prepares to meet in Boston this week, a small network of scholars — including a pair of high-profile social conservatives — is circulating a petition asking the association to think carefully about its plans to meet in Toronto next year.

Australia: TAFE teachers strike against pay rip-off

Green Left: TAFE teachers strike against pay rip-off

Two thousand striking Technical and Further Education (TAFE) teachers gathered at Melbourne’s Atheneum Theatre on August 20 to demand better pay and conditions. The last time Victorian TAFE teachers went on strike was under Jeff Kennett’s Coalition state government 13 years ago.

Hundreds of classes were cancelled and many campuses across the state closed as Melbourne teachers were joined by strikers from regional towns such as Warrnambool, Shepparton, Ballarat and Bendigo.

School year off to a shaky start in Gaza, as teachers protest Hamas control

Haaretz: School year off to a shaky start in Gaza, as teachers protest Hamas control

The Palestinian Authority education system opened the 2008-2009 school year on Sunday, with approximately 250,000 children expected to attend classes.

In Gaza, the new school year got off to a shaky start, as teachers loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas declared a five day work-stoppage.

Australia: Arts faculty face job cuts

The Australian: Arts faculty face job cuts

MELBOURNE University is threatening compulsory redundancies at its besieged arts faculty as dean Mark Considine seeks up to 20 academic job cuts to head off a faculty deficit forecast for 2010.

Academics teaching subjects with less than 40 students and who have low research output are expected to be targeted.

According to union representative Ted Clark, staff already sounded out about a voluntary exit package, will now be under intense pressure given that a $7,000 incentive payment is now on the table, staff.

Pennsylvania: RACC To Start Classes Without New Contract

WFMZ.com: RACC To Start Classes Without New Contract

Classes at Reading Area Community College will start on schedule Monday, although the faculty union doesn’t have a new contract. Officials for the union say they rejected an offer today. Sticking points between the school and the union are salary and health care.

California: Few arrested in San Diego State bust face charges

San Francisco Chronicle: Few arrested in San Diego State bust face charges

Nearly four months after federal agents and campus police stormed San Diego State University’s Fraternity Row in one of the nation’s largest campus drug busts, fewer than half of those arrested face charges as the school tries to repair its image ahead of the upcoming academic year.

Authorities announced 128 people had been arrested, but only 77 cases were referred to the San Diego County district attorney’s office, which never filed charges against eight people and dismissed charges or issued citations to another 11, bringing the total number of active charges to just 58.

Of those, the district attorney’s office says 29 have pleaded guilty. Prosecutors said only those with prior convictions would be subject to long prison sentences; most will be put on probation.

Iowa college president defends booze on boat as harmless

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This photo of Iowa Central Community College President Robert Paxton, top left, was taken July 4 at West Lake Okoboji, Paxton said. Someone in the Fort Dodge area sent it unsolicited to The Des Moines Register.

Des Moines Register: Iowa college president defends booze on boat as harmless

A photograph showing Iowa Central Community College President Robert Paxton appearing to pour beer down the throat of a young woman has been circulating in the Fort Dodge area.

Paxton, 52, and a group of young people are shown on a boat. Paxton and a young woman are holding a small keg of Coors Light above the head of another young woman, who appears to be drinking from the spigot held open by Paxton.