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Home Front: Culture Wars
Lefties Are Eating Their Own - Harvard Faculty Give Summers No-Confidence Vote
2005-03-16
In a sharp and unexpected rebuke to University President Lawrence H. Summers, members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) voted that they lack confidence in his leadership this afternoon. Voting by secret ballot in a Faculty meeting at the Loeb Drama Center, 218 professors voted for the lack of confidence motion, 185 voted against it, and 18 abstained.
i.e. 218 reasons why an ivy league education is becoming irrelevant.
The motion, submitted by Professor of Anthropology and of African and African American Studies J. Lorand Matory '82, stated that "the Faculty lacks confidence in the leadership of Lawrence H. Summers."
Matory is really saying : Summers strayed off the reservation. I thought he knew what WEbelieved. I guess he didn't.
Professors also passed a milder censure of the president, which expressed regret for his Jan. 14 comments on women in science and certain "aspects of the President's managerial approach."
Thay regret what he said? Then let them let their lazy socialist totalitarian asses out of Harvard and get a job teaching at Pyongyang Polytechnic. Managerial Approach? Is that what they {GAG} call it...
Two hundred fifty-three professors voted for that motion, which was submitted by Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology Theda Skocpol. One hundred thirty-seven professors voted against the motion, and 18 abstained.
More of the same. I revise my ressons to 253.
Both motions are non-binding—only the Harvard Corporation, the University's top governing body, can force Summers to step down. At the end of the meeting, Summers asked the Faculty for reconciliation.
Yeah, the inmates haven't overthrown the asylum...yet...
"Let me just say that I have done my best these last two months to hear what has been said, to think hard about what has been said, and to make the appropriate adjustments, to learn from what has been said and what's been done. And I will continue to do that," Summers said. "My hope would be that this Faculty will now be in a position to move on to address the vital issues that it faces."
No Chancellor Summers, they have you in thier sites as a hate object, and they need to feed thier collective ulcers.
Faculty appeared surprised when the results of the vote affirming Matory's motion were read during the meeting. And of seven professors—including Matory—approached by The Crimson after the meeting, all said they were surprised that the lack of confidence motion passed. "Honestly, I did not think that the resolution would achieve more than one-third of the votes," Matory said.
BS! You all knw that if you get enough idiots in one room, and all kinds of things can happen.
Sociology Department Chair Mary C. Waters said that the vote indicates that faculty discontent is more widespread than most professors had suspected. "I don't think any of us expected this to pass. I had no idea that so many faculty supported it," she said after the meeting. Leaving the meeting, some professors said that they do not think Summers will step down from his post.
Prof Waters really is saying: I though we could just get by attracting the news media and let them carry the ball. We've gone too far, and now, everybody will hate us, and think we are nothing but a bunch of kooks. We are, but we don't want anyone to think so...
"My guess is that President Summers will not resign," said Professor of the History of Science Everett I. Mendelsohn. But Matory said after the meeting that Summers should step down of his own accord. "There is no noble alternative for him but resignation," Matory said.
Mallory, full of venom, and newfound power, wants to take the oldest continually operating school of higher education in the country, and run it into the ground.
Weary Professor of German and Comparative Literature Judith L. Ryan said after the meeting that she thinks the votes will allow the Faculty to exercise powers of self-governance. "I think this also gives us a mandate to do more," said Ryan, noting in particular that the Faculty Council—the 18-member governing board of the FAS of which she is a member—will now wield a greater amount of power. {GAG} Professor of Economics Edward L. Glaeser said that Summers is prepared to change his leadership style to accommodate the Faculty. "I have every confidence that the president has heard the Faculty and that he takes this very seriously," Glaeser said.
Talk about a coup d'Etat... Boycott Harvard.
Over 550 people filed into the Loeb auditorium this afternoon, sitting in the aisles when all the 556 seats were taken. The line to get in spilled out onto Brattle Street, intermingling with the press on hand and curious onlookers. Shortly after the meeting began at 4:00 p.m., Matory introduced his motion to a completely silent audience. "If we do not speak clearly, the Corporation and public will believe that we are content," he said.
But lobotomy bait, you look like fools to everyone outside academia and the DNC....
Then, East Asian Languages and Civilizations Department Chair Philip A. Kuhn introduced a motion to table Matory's motion indefinitely. "The motion just proposed is needlessly divisive," he said. "What we need at this point in not division but cohesion. We need not extremes, but middle ground that will let us go forward." Kuhn said he wished for Faculty members to instead turn out in large numbers for discussion of the curricular review and other issues.
Professor Kuhn... Look out for long knives in the night...
Professors debated both motions until approximately 5 p.m., when the Faculty rejected Kuhn's motion to table by a close voice vote. Faculty members debated Matory's motion further before voting on it by secret ballot at 5:12 p.m.
Secret ballot, the cover of darkness in this case, but an opportunity to lay open the true state of the academic situation there. What a tragedy.
While the votes were counted, Skocpol presented her motion and the Faculty debated it, focusing on whether Summers' critics were stifling academic freedom and submitting to political correctness.
They are. They don't care.
As the meeting approached its close, the result of Matory's motion was announced. Summers was stoic as the FAS docket committee began to read the numbers, but his expression changed to one of surprise and disappointment once the results had been announced. Faculty also seemed startled, as the room erupted into a series of private conversations. Professors then voted on Skocpol's motion. While the votes on Skocpol's motion were counted, professors milled about the room and spoke with each other.
We got him, we got him, nyaah, nyaah, nyaah....
At a table on stage, Summers and Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby briefly conferred but largely remained silent. Though Summers traditionally chairs Faculty meetings, he asked Kirby to lead today's meeting. Kirby also led the Feb. 22 continuation of the Faculty's last full meeting.
Harvard, now a satellite campus of Pyongyang U.
Posted by:BigEd

#14  Trailing wife....
don't send her to Wheaton College - its too boring for a young person here in Wheaton.

Don't send her to UCLA - its become a bit wacko.

The younger son loves MIZZOU.... but then he's a reporter type.
Posted by: 3dc   2005-03-16 7:45:13 PM  

#13  TW - Michelle Malkin posts about a college you'd probably feel safe with:

Reader Richard Davis just heard on the radio (Michael Smerconish, WPHT Philadelphia) an interview with Widener University President Dr. James Harris.
According to Davis, Harris said Widener will begin giving four-year full scholarships to children whose military parent was killed in either Iraq or Afganistan.
The program, called "Widener Cares," will give away four scholarships each year.


Might be the type of administration and faculty you'd feel more comfortable with.

Posted by: Phitle Criter4927   2005-03-16 6:47:14 PM  

#12  You might also want to check out this website and the book that inspired it. The author has turned the initial success of the book into a second, very lucrative, I'm sure, career. But he was able to do so bbecasue the initial book is so very good. Those are the two best books that you don't usually hear about.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-16 6:01:15 PM  

#11  This will help you find the Right College. It is a pretty good survey of the state of everything you're worried about. And by and large, you're right to be worried. The choices are between the awful, the bad and the USMA. Somehow I can't imagine any of the trailers being defenceless.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-16 5:55:07 PM  

#10  Trailing Daughter #1 is 14. In four more years she starts college. Between the LLL nonsense and the rabid antisemitism pretending merely to be anti-Zionism, I'm starting to wonder if there will be any place I can safely send her (especially as she is really enjoying learning to use the Bo staff and nunchucks. And of course she is opinionated, and not terribly patient with fools,or those who think they are entitled to attack her physically).
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-03-16 5:39:19 PM  

#9  The main mistake the Harvard faculty is making here is assuming that anyone outside of their little tiny world really gives a shit about this situation.
Posted by: tu3031   2005-03-16 2:52:14 PM  

#8  I like the original story when a Woman Professor had to flee the discussion because it offended her so much. Excuse my non-PC comment: "But isn't that just like a woman to run away." I bet she is a pushover in class, she obviously doesn't have any kind of debating or thinking skill.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-03-16 2:33:55 PM  

#7  Just my thought, Mrs. D.
Posted by: too true   2005-03-16 12:34:48 PM  

#6  The faculty has gone a step too far this time and attracted attention the Corporation will not appreciate. I would imagine the letters of support are flooding into Summers office from those who count in the real world. It will be interesting to see the response.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-16 11:31:56 AM  

#5  By his statements, Sammers have shown that he is not one of their own.
Posted by: gromgorru   2005-03-16 11:00:37 AM  

#4  mojo - Great quote, lol! Buckley, King of Droll, crusher of trolls, heh.
Posted by: .com   2005-03-16 10:22:18 AM  

#3  "I'd rather be governed by the first 200 names out of the Boston phone book than the Harvard faculty."
- Wm. F. Buckley
Posted by: mojo   2005-03-16 10:19:22 AM  

#2  Just one more reason a degree from this school is nothing special.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom   2005-03-16 9:19:59 AM  

#1  A sad situation all around. When I was in school waaaaay back in the '70s even in Alabama there were some signs that the extreme liberals were making their presence felt. Until just a few months ago I hadn't realized just how far off the edge of the earth Acedemia has fallen. I didn't enter college until after my military service and there were a lot of us Vets there. It really ammused us to see how a lot of the young students were so easily swayed by the socialist leanings and outright lies of some of the "Professors". What made us angry, though, was the contempt these people held for those of us who didn't accept their bullshit as gospel. These self appointed "holier than thou" weinerheads had never ventured out past the halls of academia to actually experience the causes they were fervently espousing when we had ventured to the Halls of Montezuma, so to speak.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2005-03-16 9:11:35 AM  

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