On another thread Church Lady asked what supporters of the cause could do. USM Sympathizer replied that it would help if the newspapers were flooded with letters on behalf of the right academic values at USM.
Many people are sympathetic, but they are unwilling to be identified. When it is all over they will, of course, come out of the closet and proclaim that they were on the right side all the time. Everyone seemed to proclaim that they were a member of the French Resistance AFTER the war.
Here are the email addresses for those who are willing to write letters to the editor while the struggle is still going on. It can be done right here and now, in the luxury of your own home while you are sitting at your computer:
Those who intend to withdraw their business should consider making their displeasure known to the appropriate targets on Monday. It would be helpful if those people knew the business consequences of further faculty bashing before they attend the meeting on Thursday.
A request from us who'd love to be there but simply can't since we felt forced to leave USM beginning but not limited to April 2002: Pictures, news, thoughts, ideas - we are there in spirit even though many of were forced to take other jobs. No Quarter. Please sit in the Coca Cola Public Area and take pictures, capture thoughts etc. We depend on them!!!
To my sympathetic but silent colleagues in other colleges:
First, let me say that just as sometimes the car ahead doesn't pull into traffic because there may be a 18-wheeler bearing down that only the driver can see, just so you all must weigh your own reasons for silence and inaction and live with the results.
But having said that, I will add that I know that many lurk on this board and don't even post under a pseudonym, to say nothing of actually going public with your own distress at the ongoing demolition of the university. You say that speaking up isn't your style, or that you're working behind the scenes, or that it won't do any good anyway. But please remember that your lack of action is actually action, and it is action in favor of those who say that most faculty love Dr. Thames. Yes, we voted no confidence, and did so overwhelmingly, but people forget. Have you provided any recent evidence that the university community is miserable?
I've even heard it suggested that the liberal arts types should be writing the letters, because they are the articulate ones, but surely anyone with a Ph.D. can put together 5-6 effective sentences. (We publish, don't we?)
Think: if you could have stopped March 5, 2004 by speaking up on March 4, wouldn't you wish you had? That time is past, but March 6, 2005 is still yours.
Here are some thoughts that keep me going and keep me visible:
Better is open protest than love kept secret (Proverbs 27.5).
I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat (John Milton, Areopagitica).
We may be relatively safe on the actual asphalt road, but the virtual 18-wheeler of academic disaster is bearing down on all of us now. Please safe yourselves—stand up, be heard, and stop the coming wreck.
quote: Originally posted by: oops! (trying again) "The address didn't appear the first time. ----- The following addresses had permanent fatal errors ----- letters@jacksongannett.com (reason: 550 Host unknown) "
quote: Originally posted by: Jameela Lares "To my sympathetic but silent colleagues in other colleges:
First, let me say that just as sometimes the car ahead doesn't pull into traffic because there may be a 18-wheeler bearing down that only the driver can see, just so you all must weigh your own reasons for silence and inaction and live with the results.
But having said that, I will add that I know that many lurk on this board and don't even post under a pseudonym, to say nothing of actually going public with your own distress at the ongoing demolition of the university. You say that speaking up isn't your style, or that you're working behind the scenes, or that it won't do any good anyway. But please remember that your lack of action is actually action, and it is action in favor of those who say that most faculty love Dr. Thames. Yes, we voted no confidence, and did so overwhelmingly, but people forget. Have you provided any recent evidence that the university community is miserable?
I've even heard it suggested that the liberal arts types should be writing the letters, because they are the articulate ones, but surely anyone with a Ph.D. can put together 5-6 effective sentences. (We publish, don't we?)
Think: if you could have stopped March 5, 2004 by speaking up on March 4, wouldn't you wish you had? That time is past, but March 6, 2005 is still yours.
Here are some thoughts that keep me going and keep me visible:
Better is open protest than love kept secret (Proverbs 27.5).
I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat (John Milton, Areopagitica).
We may be relatively safe on the actual asphalt road, but the virtual 18-wheeler of academic disaster is bearing down on all of us now. Please safe yourselves—stand up, be heard, and stop the coming wreck.
No quarter, but get off the dime.
Jameela"
The silence of the faculty is one reason the students remain so quiet. If EVERYONE is speaking out they have no choice but to listen.
__________________
You only have six weeks
Date:
RE: Letters to the editor: do it now in your own h
Buried in another thread, worth kicking up for relevance.
From Salesperson:
Very early on in this battle, I suggested selling our perspective the way that this community will buy it, not necessarily in the way that we are most comfortable selling it.
If you ran a company and your top manager was responsible for the chronic turmoil and legitimate complaints of 90% of your employees, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager was constantly getting you bad press, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager was at the helm when you took a dive in consumer rankings, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager was repeatedly getting you sued, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your market share was declining, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager got you put on notice for non-compliance with a regulatory agency, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager was responsible for a decline in product quality, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager wasted money through settlements, recruitment, and training resulting from excessive turnover, would you fire that manager?
If you ran a company and your top manager lied to you, would you fire that manager?
Shelby Thames is just a manager and, obviously, a poor one. It's past time for the IHL to fire him. Isn't that what you would do if he were running your business?
quote: Originally posted by: Amy Young "I had a call early this morning from the Hattiesburg American confirming what I sent. Amy Young"
A letter I wrote to them was followed by such a confirmation call and then published. I would imagine that the call to you means that it is likely to be published.
quote: Originally posted by: Amy Young "I had a call early this morning from the Hattiesburg American confirming what I sent. Amy Young"
I too had such a call early this morning from the Hattiesburg American. They said, "Just wanted to confirm that you wrote the letter before we print it. Thanks for writing."
Thanks to "Emancipation Now," "Free the Coast also," and "Shout it from the rooftops" for making it so easy to send the letters, especially for USM refugees now living out-of-state.
Michael Kimber former professor in the former College of The Arts still with "y'all" in spirit! NO QUARTER!