September 10th, 2009
A Hail for Johnny Harvard’s Men…

… from Eric Alterman, in The Nation:

[If Harvard] allows its faculty to be corrupted by greed and payola, then society suffers as well.

… In 2008 Harvard earned an F from the American Medical Student Association for its lax conflict-of-interest standards on accepting Big Pharma cash…

[New York Times reporter Duff Wilson] tells me that “we [still] haven’t got to the bottom of the amount of influence drug companies and other special interests have on medical education or continuing medical education. As we reported, Harvard Medical’s dean wants to increase, not decrease, the school’s connections with industry.”

September 10th, 2009
An anxious time at Yale.

A graduate student, Annie Le, has been missing since Tuesday.

September 10th, 2009
You

lie.

*******************

Update: Wilson’s site now says it’s down due to extremely high traffic (the earlier lie was that it was under maintenance). Ain’t that the truth.

September 9th, 2009
Not My Department.

A law professor at Hamline University in St. Paul has been charged with tax evasion between the years 2004 and 2007.

… Between 1991 and 2003, she filed only one tax return, in 1997, within the required time. Magee, who has been employed by Hamline for 17 years, told an investigator “she teaches classes on race and religion and is not familiar with tax law,” the complaint states…

September 9th, 2009
The university as a refuge for thought in a busy world.

… Or not.

September 9th, 2009
Well, you know… there’s MORALLY tall… and there’s … PHYSICALLY tall …

Athletics director overrules code of conduct, clears Mbakwe for practice.

Star basketball transfer accused of felony assault received permission to practice in the preseason.

These are headlines in today’s University of Minnesota newspaper (UD thanks Bill).

This is the article’s first paragraph:

Months after junior basketball transfer Trevor Mbakwe was charged with felony assault of a woman in Miami, University of Minnesota Athletics Director Joel Maturi gave him permission to practice with the team.

The decision announced Tuesday lifts the automatic suspension enforced by the University’s student-athlete code of conduct.

September 9th, 2009
All this, and Rick Pitino too!

From the New York Times:

Washington Monthly has recently released its new college ranking. It’s based on several factors, one of which is a comparison between a college’s graduation rate and the makeup of its student body.

… Toward the bottom of the ranking, the University of Louisville has an expected graduation rate of 59 percent and an actual rate of 44 percent.

September 9th, 2009
Ambiguous Headline in the Indiana University Newspaper

PROFESSOR TO STUDY RISKY BEHAVIOR WITH SCIENCE GRANT

September 8th, 2009
Auburn has one of the dirtiest sports programs, and is one of the most anti-intellectual universities, in America.

Its sports program is a national disgrace (here’s one of many cheating scandals).

But you begin to understand how Auburn maintains its brainless belligerent ways when you look at its board of trustees.

Must say, it’s a new one on UD, but when she thinks about it, it makes perfect sense: Make your trustees Auburn football players.

Plus keep the girls out: Auburn’s board of trustees has got two women, twelve men. Half of the Auburn student body’s female, but you wouldn’t want the board to reflect that in any way. And girls don’t get football.

From the Opelika-Auburn News:

Auburn University is an academic institution first. Granted, athletics create plenty of spirit and excitement — and generates millions in revenue — but schools are just that. Schools.

News of Randy Campbell’s appointment to the university’s board of trustees comes with a mixed bag of feelings. Campbell was obviously a leader on the football field, quarterbacking the Tigers to the 1983 SEC championship and working as signal-caller …

Like any other academic institution, Auburn University is a business that sells education. [Amazing sentence, no? Amazing definition of a university — a business that sells education.]

With business brains and a dedicated love for Auburn, Campbell is a fine choice to replace outgoing Paul Spina as the trustee for District 6. But of 12 trustees on the board, discounting Gov. Bob Riley who serves as chairman, three played football at Auburn.

That’s one-fourth…

Yes, perception does matter, and Auburn’s gotten a lot of bad publicity because its trustees have been jocks and its presidents castrati.

So how does Auburn respond to the problem?

By appointing another football player to the board.

As we follow, on University Diaries, in the months to come, the clown school that Auburn’s become, keep these facts in mind.

September 8th, 2009
Yale’s Information Technology Services SMARTing.

Yale Daily News:

SMART Boards, which connect to regular computers and allow users to edit documents on the larger screen with stylus-type markers, came to Yale about four years ago as a high-tech alternative to chalkboards. There are currently about a dozen of the machines, which cost about $12,000 each, scattered in classrooms across Central Campus.

… Pedro Monroy, who oversees classroom media services at Yale, [said] that he does not get many requests from professors asking that SMART Boards be added to their classrooms across campus.

That’s an unfortunate commentary for a technology in which Yale has invested hundreds of thousands of dollars.

… [T]echnology is often a tough sell at Yale; [the university] stopped holding general lessons for faculty across the University before SMART Boards even came to campus because of lack of interest…

… Anne Fadiman, Yale’s Francis writer-in-residence and adjunct English professor, [is] content to teach with just chalk and a blackboard and a dozen students gathered around a table.

Asked why she doesn’t use a SMART Board, Fadiman replied in an e-mail message, “They’re too smart for me.”

****************

Who sent this Onion report on classroom technology use to UD? She can’t remember. Anyway.

September 7th, 2009
University Diaries Welcomes the Many Readers From…

… the University of Manchester who are checking out her comments on now-retired Professor Annmarie Surprenant (background here).

She’s been found guilty of gross misconduct. Manchester’s pharmacy school will take a massive hit to its reputation, and could lose accreditation altogether. You’re not supposed to hire and retain people like this.

There’s a rather chaotic comment thread about the events here, at the Times Higher Education. Read carefully, it gives you a sense of the woman’s ballsy, psycho, personality. [Note: That link’s not working very well at the moment. I’ll keep checking on it.]

Speaking of which, the one aspect of the affair which does surprise UD is Surprenant’s continued silence about the tragic youthful circumstances that made her the person she is today.

The definitive university precedent for this comes from Richard Berendzen, one of two recent disgraced ex-presidents at American University. Within minutes of his resignation, Berendzen issued a book about the tragic youthful circumstances that made him the person he is today. UD predicts a Surprenant memoir in the next few months titled

YOU’LL NEVER AMOUNT TO ANYTHING UNLESS YOU LIE, MARIE!’Surviving My Mad Mother

September 7th, 2009
That’s a relief!

FAMU football fans shouldn’t be afraid to come to home games in the wake of a campus shooting that injured three people after Saturday night’s game, said FAMU Police Chief Calvin Ross.

“People should be alert but certainly not fearful to the point that they avoid games,” Ross said Sunday in an interview with the Tallahassee Democrat. “This is at best isolated. The involved parties had no affiliation with FAMU except for the victims.”

September 7th, 2009
From braggartly insistence on success…

… to pathetic whining in the face of failure. The voice of the university athletics director.

The University of Minnesota is still hawking some of the priciest seats in its new, $300 million TCF Bank Stadium, long after it hoped to have sold out the first season.

… “If the economy was better and we had alcohol, I have no doubt we would have it all sold out,” said David Crum, an associate athletics director overseeing ticket sales for the stadium.

Oh, if, if, if, IF! Fiddle-dee-dee!

September 7th, 2009
When Your Last Prime Minister is the Focus…

… of a big corruption investigation, the Sapir Prize is a drop in the bucket.

But the tale of this Israeli literary award tells us something about conflict of interest in general, and the disgust it inspires. And the damage it does.

UD‘s already covered this totally corrupt prize, reserved for writers who have friends, relatives, and business partners among the judges. Amid the press’s revelation of clear COI involving the winner and one of the finalists, organizers — operators? — of the Sapir decided to suspend it altogether this year.

Actually, they tried to do the whole thing over again, but most writers – among the finalists, and among the general population of Israeli writers – don’t seem to think it’s worth their time to compete for a rigged prize.

Plus, the original winner and four finalists were promised prize money.

…When the fund canceled the original award on July 2, it promised to appoint a new panel of judges to choose a new winner. However, the five finalists then refused to resubmit their candidacies in protest, and “there were quite a few other authors who also said they would not compete,” the terse, five-line announcement said.

… [T]he five finalists had planned to take joint legal action to secure compensation. But attorney Mibi Mozer, who originally represented all five of them, said disagreements among them made joint action impossible. Instead, “each of the authors will take whatever action he deems necessary.” …

… “There was no literary consideration of any value in favor of a second round,” [said one finalist]. “This was a proper decision … after a string of bad, stupid decisions. But that doesn’t absolve them from resolving the issue of the prize. Mifal Hapayis shouldn’t wait for our lawyers…”

So, you know, that’s a mess. A “fiasco,” Ha’aretz calls it.

September 6th, 2009
New recruits at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Two UW-Madison men’s basketball players were jailed Sunday on tentative charges of burglary and underage drinking in the thefts of portable music players, a cell phone and $400 cash from “numerous” dormitory rooms, university police said in a news release.

Diamond Taylor and Jeremy Glover, both 18-year-old students, were confronted by police as they left Sellery Hall, according to a news release. Police had been called to the dormitory to investigate a reported burglary.

University police said in the release that the men admitted to entering the unlocked dorm rooms without permission and officers relieved the pair of “numerous items, including iPods, a cell phone and over $400 in cash.”

Police said the students may be suspects in several other burglaries …

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