December 5th, 2010
A strange and beautiful story out of Boise State.

A strange professor there has died.

Tom Trusky had obsessions — among them, the work of outsider artist James Charles Castle, about whom he wrote a biography. Here’s an announcement of a recent Castle retrospective. His work has become extremely pricey.

Boise State assumed Trusky – a man of exceedingly modest ways – left nothing of value. It was very wrong. He left the university a gift.

[T]he contents of his U.S. Bank safe-deposit box …left Trusky associates reeling. Named as his personal representative in his will, [his friend Cort] Conley was staggered to open the box and find a dozen books by acclaimed artist-bookmaker James Castle.

“I knew he had some of Castle’s work, but when I went through it, I was blown away by how many drawings he had,” [another friend] said. “I don’t think you can buy a Castle drawing today for less than $5,000.”

Greg Kucera, who sells Castle’s work at his Seattle gallery, says individual drawings have sold there for $5,000 to $20,000. The books in Trusky’s safe deposit box collectively contain hundreds of drawings…

His will stipulates that their recipient can never sell the books, which BSU almost lost to the Portland Art Museum by waiting until the final day to meet a legal deadline for accepting them.

Two of his students speak in the article’s comment thread.

Professor Trusky’s most valuable legacy to the university lives in the hearts and minds of his students. No one demanded more–or excited us more–in exposing us to the written word, with all its beauty and power.

My enduring image of him: seeing him careening through a turn at 10th and Grove on his bike, hands crossed behind his back.

December 5th, 2010
Richard Joel, the university president who had both Bernard Madoff and Ezra Merkin among his trustees…

… is amply compensated.

He’s Number 12 on the highest paid American university presidents list. (Scroll down.)

Great work, President Joel!

December 5th, 2010
More on the Duke Bonuses

University Diaries has been covering executive bonuses at Duke University. Earlier posts are here, here, and here.

From a comment thread about the Duke bonuses in the Duke newspaper:

Dr [Victor] Dzau is a director of four major corporations (sample Pepsi) earning more than $1 million in fees each year in addition to his Duke salary and his bonus. When you consider the boards meet regularly (usually 10 or 12 times a year) in distant cities, … this [is] an undue diversion of his attention.

The experts agree. From a recent New York Times article about university presidents and chancellors sitting on corporate boards:

Nell Minow, editor of the Corporate Library, an independent research firm focusing on corporate governance, [says], “it is just physically impossible to do the work necessary to be a good director” [when you sit on many boards]. The Corporate Library estimates that board members must invest 240 hours a year, including meetings and preparation, to do the work properly. But it can become a full-time job if the company runs into trouble.

Charles M. Elson, a corporate governance specialist at the University of Delaware, is highly critical of university presidents who serve on several boards… “If you see a university president on multiple boards, that’s a problem,” he says. “There is no way you can do the job. Someone has got short shrift.”

… [There is now] a movement to limit the number of boards each president serves. In the University of California system, for example, the Board of Regents voted in January to restrict board membership for its chancellors to three.

Raymond D. Cotton, a partner at the Washington law firm Mintz Levin who specializes in presidential contracts and has represented about 250 institutions, says he recommends to universities that they write into contracts that the president can serve on a maximum of two boards.

Duke is rewarding Dzau for not being on campus.

December 5th, 2010
UPDATE: Duke Bonuses Fund.

Here’s some important background on the Duke Bonuses.

Kudos to Professor Amy Laura Hall, spearheading the effort to make sure these men get every penny coming to them. And then some.

December 5th, 2010
Well, I guess this one’s not a secret anymore.

UD‘s kid will perform in the Kennedy Center Honors tonight (it’ll be broadcast on December 28).

During yesterday’s rehearsal, she watched Steve Tyler perform some Beatles songs (her group will also sing Beatles songs). I wasn’t supposed to blog about Tyler, because the honorees (Paul McCartney, in this case) aren’t supposed to know in advance who’s performing their songs.

But UD‘s sister just sent her this article, which reveals that McCartney asked for Tyler. So I’m not giving anything away.

There are two other performers with whom La Kid performs tonight — and those names I’ll continue to keep to myself.

December 5th, 2010
University of Oregon:

‘A plasma-screen sports infrastructure and a covered-wagon academic budget.’

December 5th, 2010
Strange brew. Killing what’s inside of you.

Oklahoma is a very backward state.

The OU Board of Regents approved raises for all nine assistant football coaches Oct. 28. …Kevin Wilson and Brent Venables received a $45,000 raise, increasing their salaries to $440,000 and $430,000 respectively.

Less than two weeks later, during his State of the University address to the Faculty Senate on Monday, OU President David Boren warned … department heads to prepare for a 5-percent budget cut…

[T]his situation highlights the strange reality that football coaches making six figures a year can get a pay raise during a time when the already-weak state budget is experiencing a $400 million shortfall …

Strange brew, OU. Killing what’s inside of you.

December 4th, 2010
“Although there were no stabbings in that instance.”

Ah, the good old days.

December 4th, 2010
If you still haven’t made your donation to the Victor Dzau Bonus Fund…

these two YouTubes from Duke should help motivate you to dig into your pockets.

Please see this post for background. And remember: Nothing you can give could ever be enough; but whatever you can give will help.

December 4th, 2010
She’s the highest paid president of a non-profit or public university in America…

… and what are they paying her for?

Results like this, I guess: Rensselaer Polytechnic University is ranked tenth in the nation for worst professors.

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

I’ve been reading through the RPI Rate My Professors pages. The school has quite a few legendarily bad professors – professors known by all, for decades, to be insulting, lazy, incomprehensible.

My favorite comment from among many negative appraisals of professors there:

This professor does not like people or questions.

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

To be fair, I doubt President Jackson knows about any of this. Too busy on corporate boards.

December 4th, 2010
UD’s friend and colleague, Thomas Mallon…

… gets a wonderful write-up from Christopher Hitchens.

December 4th, 2010
After three Southern Miss players get shot up in a brawl (one’s paralyzed) at a Hattiesburg bar at 2:00 AM…

… everyone – but everyone – hates the idea of changing local laws to close the bars at midnight.

In an editorial, Southern Miss students make the argument:

There is no reason to believe that closing bars at midnight instead of 2 a.m. will curtail violence. In fact, the effect could be worse for public safety.

The extra two hours gives people who may consume alcoholic beverages earlier in the night time to sober up. But many people who drink will not stop at 10 p.m.; for many, that’s the time they start. Closing at midnight will only mean that there will be more impaired drivers on the road at a time when traffic is already heavier.

UD isn’t sure why the students don’t take the obvious next step: Why close the bars of Hattiesburg at all? If it’s safer for them to stay open until 2, it’s even safer for them never to close.

December 4th, 2010
“What is more important, personally, your school’s academics or its sports? Publicly, we all say academics (well, aside from people in Alabama).”

An ESPN writer goes on to share further thoughts.

[W]hy are so many schools spending so much on facilities anyway? Why are we paying coaches millions and millions when their not-so-distant predecessors earned far less? Who is benefiting from the self-driven rise in costs? And how? We’re still playing the same schools. The players still are not paid (wink, wink). The concession stands still charge way too much for a soda.

How is all this money making any part of the college sports experience better?

If we were talking about professional sports it would be one thing. Pro salaries may be obscene, but teams spend their own money. But we’re often talking about public money in collegiate sports. As that NCAA report reveals, even when the athletic department is supposedly self-funded, programs still needed a median of $10 million in institutional subsidies to cover their costs last year.

December 3rd, 2010
“Victor Dzau, chancellor of the Duke health system, got a $983,654 bonus, bringing his total compensation to more than $2.2 million.”

Not only that, but Dzau sits on a shitload of corporate boards, which pay him hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars. The dude is raking it in.

Which bothers a few divinity school types at Duke, who note that

the university paid the bonuses even as it was cutting jobs and eliminating raises for most other workers.

… In recent years, Duke has frozen pay and eliminated jobs in an attempt to pare its annual operating budget by $100 million.

Nearly 400 workers have accepted buyout offers since early 2009. Their jobs were then eliminated.

“During a time when the administration is saying we all needed to tighten our belts and make sacrifices…as it turns out, some of the folks who lost money for Duke [she’s talking about investment managers, who also got bonuses] were giving themselves bonuses,” said Amy Laura Hall, a tenured professor of Christian ethics. “I think that’s obscene.” …

Some of Hall’s students have taken to the quads dressed in Depression era gear and selling apples: “With all the cuts we have around here and all the bonuses we have to give to the big guys, we need to raise all the money we can.”

UD will be sending an executive bonus donation to Duke this evening, and she encourages you to do the same. At a time of real fiscal distress, Duke remains foursquare in its defense of its executive reward system. Its executives themselves are equally remarkable for their fidelity, through thick and thin, to the principle of unlimited personal enrichment.

December 3rd, 2010
Party Pooper.

A letter in the University of Georgia newspaper.

The incident that led to the resignation of The Red & Black’s editor-in-chief is not particularly surprising, given the extraordinary emphasis placed on alcohol and partying in your paper this fall.

The relentless “No. 1 Party School”-themed articles and link on The Red & Black’s website speak volumes — volumes of vodka, as it turns out.

Since 2004 I have contributed 85 published columns to The Red & Black.

But this fall I chose not to submit anything at all, primarily because of my disappointment with the direction of the paper.

I hope the forced shake-up in leadership is a turning point for The Red & Black, which in past years has been the best newspaper in Athens.

John Knox
Assistant professor Athens
Geography

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