In Abrupt Reversal, Erwin Chemerinsky to Become Law Dean at UC-Irvine

The Chronicle News Blog: In Abrupt Reversal, Erwin Chemerinsky to Become Law Dean at UC-Irvine

The University of California at Irvine is hiring Erwin Chemerinsky as its law dean after all. In a news conference that is still going on, the university’s chancellor, Michael V. Drake, is announcing that Mr. Chemerinsky, a professor at Duke University, will become the law school’s inaugural dean, less than a week after Dr. Drake drew an avalanche of criticism for at first offering Mr. Chemerinsky the job, then withdrawing the offer because he was “too politically controversial” — which many critics viewed as code words for “too liberal.”

UC yanks speaker’s invitation: Controversial ex-Harvard president was scheduled to address regents Wednesday

The Davis Enterprise: UC yanks speaker’s invitation: Controversial ex-Harvard president was scheduled to address regents Wednesday

After a group of UC Davis women faculty began circulating a petition, UC regents rescinded an invitation to Larry Summers, the controversial former president of Harvard University, to speak at a board dinner Wednesday night in Sacramento. The dinner comes during the regents’ meeting at UCD next week.

Internal Panel Will Review Plagiarism Allegations Against President of Southern Illinois U.

The Chronicle: Internal Panel Will Review Plagiarism Allegations Against President of Southern Illinois U.

A panel of seven senior faculty members will investigate plagiarism accusations against the president of Southern Illinois University, the institution announced last week. The group’s ability to be impartial is already being questioned.

Hiring Debacle Prompts Damage Control and Conflicting Views at UC-Irvine

The Chronicle: Hiring Debacle Prompts Damage Control and Conflicting Views at UC-Irvine

Officials at the University of California at Irvine are scrambling to try to undo the damage caused by the chancellor’s sudden decision last week to rescind a contract offered to Erwin Chemerinsky, a prominent Duke University law professor, to be Irvine’s inaugural law-school dean. One possibility that was reportedly being pursued: rescinding the rescission and hiring the outspoken liberal after all.

Whether he would consider such an offer is another matter. “I really don’t know how I’d feel about that,” the Duke professor said on Saturday. “This has been one of the longest and hardest weeks of my life, and it’s hard to start thinking in those terms.”

Music Scholar Barred From U.S., but No One Will Tell Her Why

The New York Times: Music Scholar Barred From U.S., but No One Will Tell Her Why

Nalini Ghuman, an up-and-coming musicologist and expert on the British composer Edward Elgar, was stopped at the San Francisco airport in August last year and, without explanation, told that she was no longer allowed to enter the United States.

Donald Rumsfeld headed to Stanford

Stanford Daily: Donald Rumsfeld headed to Stanford

Former Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld will be joining the ranks of the Hoover Institution as a distinguished visiting fellow, the University announced Friday afternoon.

Legal scholar’s dismissal could delay UCI law school opening

San Diego Union Tribune: Legal scholar’s dismissal could delay UCI law school opening

The opening of the University of California, Irvine’s new law school in 2009 could be delayed now that the school has to begin a new search for a founding dean, said officials.

UK: John Denham: Universities biased against poor

Daily Telegraph: John Denham: Universities biased against poor

Leading universities are guilty of bias towards middle-class teenagers leading to a “huge waste” of the talents of children from poor backgrounds, a Government minister said yesterday.

John Denham, the Universities Secretary, said some of the “most sought-after” institutions were shunning bright children from poor homes.

University Fences In a Berkeley Protest, and a New One Arises

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New York Times: University Fences In a Berkeley Protest, and a New One Arises

In many ways and for many months, the protest outside Memorial Stadium at the University of California has been business, and Berkeley, as usual.

On one side are the protesting tree lovers who have been living Tarzan-like since December in a stand of coastal oaks and other trees. On the other is the university, which wants to cut down the trees to build a $125 million athletic center, part of a larger plan to upgrade its aging, seismically challenged football stadium.

Michael Drake: Why I let Chemerinsky go

Los Angeles Times: Michael Drake: Why I let Chemerinsky go

I made a management decision — not an ideological or political one — to rescind the job offer, says the UC Irvine chancellor.

Erwin Chemerinsky: Dumped over an Op-Ed

Los Angeles Times: Erwin Chemerinsky: Dumped over an Op-Ed

Erwin Chemerinsky, unhired as UC Irvine’s founding law school dean, says his ordeal is a lesson in academic freedom.

Kentucky: COMPLAINT: TOO MANY REPUBLICANS

The Chronicle: COMPLAINT: TOO MANY REPUBLICANS

Kentucky’s attorney general has taken his dispute with the state’s governor over the makeup of public-university governing boards to court. His lawsuit seeks to have 13 of the governor’s appointments declared invalid.

New York: Rensselaer Professors Challenge Provost’s Decision to Suspend Faculty Senate

The Chronicle: Rensselaer Professors Challenge Provost’s Decision to Suspend Faculty Senate

A struggle over faculty governance is coming to a head at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where faculty members plan to vote next week on a proposal that would ask the university’s provost to reinstate the Faculty Senate, which he suspended in early August.

The provost, Robert E. Palazzo, has cited concerns about possible interference in a continuing review of faculty governance as one of his reasons for suspending the senate on August 7. But some professors say they suspect the move was in response to the senate’s election as its vice president a colleague who has openly criticized Rensselaer’s president, Shirley Ann Jackson.

State to Investigate Whether Arizona State U. Broke Law on Aid to Illegal Immigrants

Arizona Republic: State to Investigate Whether Arizona State U. Broke Law on Aid to Illegal Immigrants

Last November, seven out of 10 voters decreed that no longer shall undocumented immigrants get in-state tuition or any public help in covering the out-of-state tab.

Prosecutors Say Former Texas Southern U. President Ran Up $100,000 Bar Tab

The Chronicle News Blog: Prosecutors Say Former Texas Southern U. President Ran Up $100,000 Bar Tab

The trial of Priscilla D. Slade, who was fired last year as Texas Southern University’s president, is in full swing. Ms. Slade, who led the financially troubled university from 1999 to 2006, is accused of misspending more than $500,000 in university money on personal expenses during her tenure.

Hawai’i: Track and field coach sues UH

Honolulu Advertiser: Track and field coach sues UH

The University of Hawai’i “balanced the UH athletics budget on the back of women’s athletics,” the school’s women’s track and field coach charged in a lawsuit filed in Circuit Court yesterday.

Nebraska: UNL professor who took explosives to class makes deal to resign

Omaha World-Herald: UNL professor who took explosives to class makes deal to resign

A chemistry professor who had explosives in class has agreed to resign from a tenured position at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Iowa Presidents Arm campus police

Des Moines Regiter: Presidents: Arm campus police

The presidents of Iowa’s three public universities recommended Wednesday that certified campus police officers be armed.

Bridgeport buys another college

Inside Higher Ed:

Bridgepoint Education, a growing for-profit higher education company, announced Wednesday that it has purchased the Colorado School of Professional Psychology, which is located in Colorado Springs and offers master’s and doctoral degrees in psychology. The institution, which has been nonprofit, will be renamed the University of the Rockies and additional degree programs will be added. Bridgepoint’s purchase comes at a time that for-profit purchases of nonprofit colleges appear to be on the rise.

California: Law School Deanship Rescinded; Politics Blamed

Inside Higher Ed: Law School Deanship Rescinded; Politics Blamed

If Erwin Chemerinsky were ever nominated for a place on the Supreme Court, it’s safe to say that he would not be one of those blank slate candidates about whom reporters and would-be critics have to go digging to ascertain his views.
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“I’ve been a liberal law professor for 28 years,” Chemerinsky told the Los Angeles Times Wednesday. “I write lots of op-eds and articles, I argue high-profile cases.”