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Taking the cause of the academic rights of the right (the msm can't write objectively, can they?)
St. Petersburg Times ^ | May 29, 2005 | ANITA KUMAR

Posted on 05/29/2005 1:51:36 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

WASHINGTON - Across the nation, liberal professors are being accused of abusing their conservative students by humiliating them in classes, lowering their grades, forcing them to listen to radical leftist views.

Some lawmakers want to even the score. They want to forbid professors from bashing President Bush, mandate that they teach creationism alongside evolution and require them to explain in history class that some doubt the Holocaust existed.

In California, legislators considered an academic bill of rights, an eight-point credo designed to increase political diversity in the classroom. The same declaration was debated in Maine. And in Florida and 12 other states. Congress also is considering something similar.

The proposals are alike because a single group is behind the national effort: Students for Academic Freedom.

It's the latest crusade for David Horowitz, political activist and head of the conservative Center for the Study of Popular Culture.

Run by Horowitz, 66, and three other people - none of them students - Students for Academic Freedom has encountered fierce opposition from faculty and administrators, who accuse outsiders of trying to dictate the number of Republican and Democratic professors on campus.

Universities are undergoing a conservative resurgence by students. An already deeply divided nation is even more so at a time of war and terrorism. Several professors have made headlines with recent controversial statements.

"I've changed the dynamics," Horowitz said from his Los Angeles home. "I've introduced a game plan here that is effective. This will work."

* * *

K Street in downtown Washington is the address of some of the capital's most powerful lawyers and lobbyists, who trade access for millions of dollars in campaign contributions.

In a tiny, cramped room tucked in the National Hispanic Medical Association on K Street near the White House are the D.C. offices, such as they are, of Students for Academic Freedom. From here, 26-year-old Sara Dogan rallies college students and helps them organize for the fight ahead.

Booklets instructing students on the campaign are piled on a shelf, alongside a stack of the academic bill of rights. Copies of Horowitz's books line another shelf.

As national campus director for Students for Academic Freedom, Dogan has helped launch 150 campus chapters in almost every state, though some have only one or two students. The University of Florida, Florida State University and Florida International University have chapters. The University of North Florida is starting one, too.

Horowitz formed the group in the fall of 2003 after hearing story after story about conservative thinkers belittled or shut out of classroom discussions, graduate programs, even tenure. He says he spent a year trying to talk to administrators about the problem but got nowhere.

The group's motto is: "You can't get a good education if they are only telling you half the story."

"These practices are out of control and are outrageous," he said. "These are just professors so unprofessional they can't keep political agendas out of the classroom."

Horowitz grew up in the McCarthy era, in a heavily communist neighborhood in New York City where his father taught school and he attended a Communist Party-run summer camp for kids. Horowitz grew up to be a leader in what was called the "New Left," editing the magazine Ramparts, an influential left-wing publication.

In the 1970s, he abandoned the left after he decided the anti-Vietnam War movement was wrong and after his friends continued to defend the Black Panthers after he came to believe they murdered his friend Betty Van Patter, a bookkeeper for the group.

In the 1980s, Horowitz founded the Center for the Study of Popular Culture, which runs an online journal, Frontpagemag.com, and an online database, discoverthenetworks.org, which tries to list all the people and groups that make up "the left."

The center gets its money from conservative foundations and 35,000 donors; it gave more than $300,000 to Students for Academic Freedom in 2003, according to the most recent tax records available.

Lately, most of Horowitz's energy has been focused on colleges. He has crisscrossed the nation, speaking on campuses three or four times a week and testifying at legislative committees. In his spare time, he is writing a book about academic freedom.

His "bill of rights" is modeled on 1940 academic freedom principles written by the American Association of University Professors. It has been rewritten to be about students, not professors.

But the professors' association and others in academia are opposed; they say Students for Academic Freedom will limit free speech in the classroom by intimidating professors into avoiding controversial topics.

Mark Smith, AAUP's director of government relations, described the bill of rights as an outside intrusion designed to make campuses more politically equal. "Political balance is different from academic balance," he said.

Horowitz accuses the media and opponents of waging a "malicious campaign" against him. "What you get is lies, lies, lies," he said. "I didn't think it would be quite this vitriolic and dishonest."

In April, a student threw a pie in his face as he gave a speech in Indiana. That same month Gov. Jeb Bush called Horowitz a "fighter for freedom."

Several national studies are on Horowitz's side, showing that liberal professors outnumber conservative professors on campuses. This year for the first time, universities made the list of top organizations ranked by employees' contributions to a presidential candidate, John Kerry, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

Horowitz traces the problem to college students who grew up during the anti-Vietnam War movement and stayed on campus as professors.

Since Horowitz formed Students for Academic Freedom, students have logged more than 1,000 complaints. Many of the allegations can't be proven or come down to a student's word against a professor's word.

"It's humiliating," said 20-year-old Mary Moloney, an FSU junior who was upset when she said an exam asked if President Bush was responsible for the 2001 terrorists attacks. "The professor's belief brings down your credibility."

* * *

Florida Rep. Dennis Baxley attended a conservative conference in St. Louis last summer where Horowitz spoke about academic freedom. The message struck a chord. After talking to Horowitz, Baxley introduced a bill in the Florida Legislature.

Like others around the nation, Baxley's bill would have given students the right to object if their professors discussed controversial issues irrelevant to a class. It also would have required student fees to be spent on a "viewpoint-neutral basis."

Fifteen states considered similar bills in the past two legislative cycles. None passed.

In Georgia, the Senate approved it but the House did not. In Colorado, lawmakers abandoned it after university leaders promised to review student rights and grievance procedures.

In Florida, Baxley said he plans to keep talking to university administrators and the Board of Governors, which oversees higher education. He said he probably will file a similar bill next year.

"We set off a grassfire of education," said Baxley, who also introduced a bill to prolong the life of Terri Schiavo. "When you file a bill like that, no one knows where it's going to go."

In Congress, Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., introduced a similar bill that is included in this year's Higher Education Act, which deals with all things higher education.

"College is a time when you form your own opinions about the issues that affect our society," said Kingston, who wants the Ten Commandments posted in the House and Senate chambers. "If our students are not shown the whole picture, they are being cheated out of a true education.

"It is not a matter of enforcement. There's a problem and Congress recognizes it."

Horowitz disputes that bills died in Florida, Georgia or any other state. He says they are still being considered, though many state legislatures wrapped up business for the year.

"We've achieved an enormous amount," he said. "We've put it on the national scene. I'm going to be patient. I will be back."

Times researcher Carolyn Edds contributed to this report. Staff writer Anita Kumar can be reached at kumar@sptimes.com or 202 463-0576.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: academia; conservatives; davidhorowitz; education; highereducation; horowitz; liberalprofessors; msm
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1 posted on 05/29/2005 1:51:36 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: A_Conservative_Chinese

It's important to know how your opposition is defining you.


3 posted on 05/29/2005 2:08:12 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

"...abusing their conservative students by humiliating them in classes, lowering their grades, forcing them to listen to radical leftist views."

Yeah. That happens. In my professional experience, I witnessed such things and worse. There's no reason we should pay for the liberal version of North Korean Mind Control that is served up at the nation's elite colleges and universities. We should be concerned about the ridiculous articifical class system and oligarchical power structure that this type of academic culture spawns. The pompous honors accorded to Harvard and Yale graduates are absurd and obscene.

4 posted on 05/29/2005 2:19:20 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity

Your FReeper name fits this academic imbalance situation nicely.


5 posted on 05/29/2005 2:26:05 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

The long and the short of it: Ivy League liberalism is a mental disorder.


6 posted on 05/29/2005 2:27:04 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity

As is, msm contention they aren't biased.


7 posted on 05/29/2005 2:38:07 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Bump.


8 posted on 05/29/2005 2:40:04 AM PDT by aculeus (Ceci n'est pas une tag line.)
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To: All
University's ban on ROTC stirring furor in Wisconsin***...."I do not think, in good conscience, we can invite an organization to campus that discriminates against anyone because of sexual orientation," Chancellor Charles Sorenson wrote in e-mail he sent campuswide May 6. "At a time when we are promoting diversity and tolerance, ROTC would send quite a different message, stating in effect that we say one thing but practice another."

...............Sorenson replied that he rejected ROTC because one of the three on-campus senates, representing the academic staff, would not endorse it......***

9 posted on 05/29/2005 2:41:32 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Psycho Gramscian-Lacanian Marxist professors always hand back papers to students with the most red ink and degrading, condescending comments. They use their students as punching bags to work through their own issues (which are many and deep, indeed).

Craziest professor I ever encountered was a militant feminist archaeology teacher who was always trying to catch male students with trumped-up plagiarism charges, making a federal case out of it. Her tantrums and PMS episodes were in the Book of Revelation territory.

Too much time on her hands. Classic anti-male borderline psychosis.

10 posted on 05/29/2005 2:52:10 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Here's an idea. Why not offer some reward for leftist professors caught in the act? Students could surreptitiously take video of examples of bias with small digital cameras and turn them over to Accuracy in Academia or David Horowitz. Probably some legal issues, though.


11 posted on 05/29/2005 3:04:23 AM PDT by Misterioso
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity

http://phantomprof.blogspot.com/2005_05_01_phantomprof_archive.html#111656009528619600


Seeing red in a red state [The Phantom Professor]


The neo-cons love to whine about how liberal college educators are. Here's a shocking admission from this screaming, beaming Kerry voter: They're right.

In my experience, college faculty, even on this W-lovin' campus, lean way left politically even as each new class of students marches in well-shod lockstep with their rich parents' rightwing views. It's like this: Like journalism, academia draws more of your bleeding heart liberati than other professions such as, say, real estate development and Wall Street. It attracts souls who are in it for the passion, not the cashin'. And there are plenty of teachers still in tenured positions who came into the academy during the hippie-yippy days of the Viet Nam War and Watergate because they were drawn as students to campus activism and then stayed because it was a safe place to express and explore the counterculture. The job security's nice, too, once you've made it over the tenure hurdle.

Look, this used to be a "liberal arts" college. But the L-word long ago was excised from the brochures and the catalog, replaced with the more exclusive sounding "private university." Like "private club," that carries a certain cachet that makes the hoity-toits think of it as an enclave where their young 'uns won't be confronted with too many views counter to their own on topics such as evolution, abortion rights, gay rights and affirmative action. It's a campus with mostly white students and mostly white faculty. Don't think that doesn't make a difference to some.

Little do they know that among the faculty hoi polloi are a great many who vote Democrat (or even for Nader, when he's running), observe Earth Day, join the ACLU and AAUP, applaud Molly Ivins' newspaper columns, Michael Moore's films and Al Franken's Air America radio. I'd say we also happily attend gay weddings, but I stopped going to any such shindigs after a friend appointed me maid of honor and then delivered the one-size-too-tight polyester orange halter dress I was supposed to wear. Exposing your political beliefs to public scrutiny is one thing -- upper arms are quite another.

At this school they excel at promoting a clean-cut country club image. Here the Ashleys, Courtneys, Megans and Madisons can major in elementary ed or PR, getting by on gut courses and their good looks, but rarely being exposed to philosophies of thought that might upset a Red State family's status quo. "If you're such a liberal, why do you even teach at this school?" asked a portly young Republican enrolled in my writing class last fall. Even in jeans and a T-shirt, the kid always gave the impression he was wearing a three-piece suit.

It's not quite Bob Jones University -- yet -- but since W took office, it's only become more obvious to those of us paying close attention that the higher-ups would like the mouthier liberals on campus to keep their traps shut. The team colors may be red and blue, but it seems that the red is getting a lot more play on the football uniforms and pompons lately.

This White House administration has lots of ties to the school. The president honored the First Lady with a commemorative walkway with her name on it outside one of the main libraries. And what doesn't say love better than 10 or 12 feet of bronze letters on a sidewalk? What a romantic.

The school is one of several in this state vying to build the presidential library on its campus, although where they'll put it is still a mystery. After the brand new workout facility is completed this year -- yes, they're erecting a sprawling state of the art gym/spa because students didn't like having to fork over thousands to join the floocy-doocy health club a HALF MILE AWAY -- there's barely room to breathe as it is.

Some of the president's closest advisors are alumni. One of them, a frequent comer-and-goer in the White House over the two terms, visited campus not too long ago for a sold-out speaking engagement. She was invited to visit some classes, too, and the Secret Service swooped in days before to survey and secure the buildings she'd be passing through. At the entrance of ours, just beyond where the First Amendment is chiseled in stone on the outside wall, is a set of glass double doors. Between the first and second doors you'll find racks of free reading material, including the alternative weekly I write for, plus the gay weekly, the "pennysaver" and a big stack of something called "Nu Image," a slick freebie advertising local plastic surgeons. There's also a bulletin board where anyone can tack up "books for sale" signs or "roommate wanted" fliers.

The night before the VIP's visit, workers were busy in that doorway for hours. By morning, all of the freebie papers and the bulletin board had been obscured from view by two enormous racks of long velvet draperies. God forbid, the pol should walk past something with the word "gay" or "alternative" on it.

A few steps inside the building, she would see a friendlier sight. On enormous square canvas boards running the full length of the main hallway are photographic tributes to W and his pals behind plexiglas covers. There he is shaking hands with this student and that one. There he is making a speech at the RNC, where some of our students earned college credit hours working as runners and gofers. Photo after happy photo arranged in pleasing patterns.

As Mr. Roark used to say in the opening of Fantasy Island, "Smiles, everyone! Smiles!"



(they zarched the term "liberal arts" out of the school's description years ago)

posted by theprofessor @ 8:57 PM
____________________________________________________


http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/city/dallas/stories/051505dnmetprof.aad72702.html


SMU blogger unmasked, unemployed

SMU official says contract not related to teacher's chronicles



When an anonymous professor launched a brutally candid Web site, some SMU students thought the resemblance to their school was striking – and offensive.

The "Phantom Professor" blog dished about epidemic eating disorders and wealthy students looking for a "Mrs." degree. The author dubbed girls in $500 sandals toting $1,500 handbags "the Ashleys" and called a handsome male colleague "Hot Pockets."

Now, after much speculation, Elaine Liner's identity has been confirmed. A local writer, she has done theater reviews for the Dallas Observer in recent months and has written articles for The Dallas Morning News in the past.


SMU blogger unmasked, unemployed


12 posted on 05/29/2005 3:10:34 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Misterioso
http://www.studentsforacademicfreedom.org/
13 posted on 05/29/2005 3:14:01 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

I had a student come to me one time describing a "Philosophy" course he was in. All the professor did, he complained, was whine about how bad and stupid Ronald Reagan was. The description of the course had nothing to do with politics.


14 posted on 05/29/2005 3:18:02 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Some lawmakers want to even the score. They want to forbid professors from bashing President Bush, mandate that they teach creationism alongside evolution and require them to explain in history class that some doubt the Holocaust existed.

Sheesh! The MSM manages to lump:

1. President Bush

2. Christianity

and

3. Holocaust Denial

into the same sentence. These people are pathetic.

15 posted on 05/29/2005 3:20:00 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
The article states you can reach Anita Kumar (who badly needs an editor with a pulse) at:

kumar@sptimes.com

16 posted on 05/29/2005 3:24:37 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Thanks for posting. David Horowitz IS a freedom fighter.


17 posted on 05/29/2005 3:26:01 AM PDT by PGalt
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To: Misterioso

Can't be any "legal issues". The student has paid for the class and that means all of te class, including whatever method the student sees fit to record for his study the material presented and or required in te course of instruction.

The teacher's material is protected by copyright, but the academic fair use issue is well settled, as it the citizen's right tocompell witnesses in a suit.

Check your life preservers - the leftist teachers are all going to be crying us a river.


18 posted on 05/29/2005 3:40:05 AM PDT by GladesGuru
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
It isn't a mental disorder, nor can it be. It ain't in the shrink's book of "disorders".

Where such behavior is described is in the Constitution, where it is either sedition or treason, depending on the circumstances.
19 posted on 05/29/2005 3:43:02 AM PDT by GladesGuru
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
.... The description of the course had nothing to do with politics.

And yet, try to leave their realm......

Homeschoolers keep the faith - Is this education - or indoctrination?

20 posted on 05/29/2005 4:25:50 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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