Good morning regular viewers. Also, thanks to the good publicity the AAUP message board received at Thursday evening's meeting at Warren Paving, good morning to all of the new viewers too! For those who are visiting the Citation de la Semaine thread for the first time, let me explain that this is a weekly Sunday-only feature on the message board. #1 Groupie, 80's Lady, Delta Dawn, and your host Mr. Wonderful, monitor the board's activity and identify the posted quotes which we believe best reflect the "spirit of the board" during the past week. We typically award a few "Honorable Mention" recognitions, a "Runner Up." and a "Winner," but the format is flexible and one to which we do not always adhere. This morning, for instance, we are going to deviate somewhat from that format. We are a geographically diverse committee (from the warm breezes of the Gulf South to the harsh cold winds of the Atlantic). None of us reside in Florida (as a poster once cleverly but mistakenly guessed from that geographical information). Actually, we sometimes get our wires crossed because of the difference in the time zones where we reside. Our political, cultural, and social inclinations range from liberal to conservative on a few national issues, but ours is a group effort, and we inject none of our personal opinions on those issues in our weekly Citation de la Semaine selections.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Because of Spring break at USM, there will be no Citation de la Semaine awards ceremony on March 20. The next presentations will be on Sunday, March 27.
AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT: The selection committee thanks Stanley Hauer for making available on the message board the unedited full-text version of a letter submitted by former Dean Terry Harper to the Hattiesburg American. The unedited full-text version forms the basis for the Citation de la Semaine selection committee's first ever SPECIAL MERIT AWARD, as well as for this week's WINNER, FIRST RUNNER UP, and eleven HONORABLE MENTIONS.
SPECIAL MERIT AWARD - Glenn T. Harper: "As one of the deans summarily dismissed on an early January morning in 2003, I have remained silent regarding the continuing controversies at USM, determined to avoid doing or saying anything that could be construed as "sour grapes." But I can no longer permit my silence to abet in even the smallest way the efforts of those individuals who seem determined to destroy what had truly become a fine university.
Building on a strong foundation laid during the tenure of President McCain, USM had by the mid 1980s and certainly by the 1990s become an institution of which faculty and students were proud. Working in a close partnership characterized by mutual respect, administrators and faculty built strong programs across the campus and in doing so earned for the university an outstanding regional–and in some cases national–reputation. How pleased we all were when external consultants, brought in by the IHL Board to evaluate programs throughout Mississippi, ranked USM’s programs in virtually all disciplines at or near the top. And how absolutely delighted we-- especially those of us in Liberal Arts--were when the consultant evaluating English departments insisted that ours had to rank within the top 10% across the nation! Unfortunately, I fear, such ranking are a thing of the past. For the last two years, USM has been an institution in turmoil. And the turmoil was so unnecessary. What a contrast between the academic reorganization carried out by fiat in 2003 involving literally no faculty input with the even greater reorganization of late 1980s (successfully reducing the number of degree-granting units from eleven to six) during which faculty and staff had every opportunity to express their views! What reputable institution in this day and age would fire senior tenured professors for legitimately questioning the credentials of a senior administrator? And the embarrassments experienced by the university-the sham enrollment figures (announced naturally at a football game), the SACS probation, the drop to tier four, among others!
For the last two years, USM has been an institution in turmoil. And the turmoil was so unnecessary. What a contrast between the academic reorganization carried out by fiat in 2003 involving literally no faculty input with the even greater reorganization of late 1980s (successfully reducing the number of degree-granting units from eleven to six) during which faculty and staff had every opportunity to express their views! What reputable institution in this day and age would fire senior tenured professors for legitimately questioning the credentials of a senior administrator? And the embarrassments experienced by the university–the sham enrollment figures (announced naturally at a football game), the SACS probation, the drop to tier four, among others!
And now what appears to be a calculated assault on the liberal arts, orchestrated no doubt by the central administration and apparently supported by a group of self-appointed "community leaders"! What I ask is a university without strong programs in the humanities, the social sciences, and the basic sciences. Are not critical thining and effective communication skills essential to an individual's well-being? Are not a fundamental knowledge of history, an appreciation of one's cultural heritage, and a basic understanding of contemporary institutions among the hallmarks of an educated person? Does a university exist solely for the purposes of "economic development"? I think not - not a real university. USM will survive this present dark period. But the cost of rebuilding will be long, arduous, and costly. Let's hope that the download spiral will soon come to an abrupt halt."
THIS WEEK'S WINNER - 1/USMTTT: "The loss of Dean Harper put in tangible form, the symbolic lost the university felt when Shelby Freland Thames became president. Dr. Harper was (and still is) a man of the highest integrity who earned the respect of all who served with him. USM was a university where each individual was respected and each individual was respected and each individual's contribution to the university was appreciated . . . Deans like Terry Harper, Jane Boudreau and Carl Martray squeezed the best out of their faculty and staff . . . not through fear and intimidation but through leadership, encouragement and support. Dr. Harper always commented on a job well done and a few words of praise from him were worth much, much more tha midas-tainted money. Thank you, Dean Harper, for the years of devoted service to our university and for your successful efforts to build one of the best Colleges of Liberal Arts in the country."
FIRST RUNNER UP - Stephen Judd:
Dean Harper: We have never really met but I have seen you at various places around town. Every time I think of the great Dean massacre you are one of those of whom I think of most. All of us know how the game of change should be played in a university: with grace, style, and always concern for those who are the victims of change. That an incoming President wanted to change his Deans would not have been a suprise to anyone. That Deans would be summoned to breakfast, summarily and simultaneously handed their heads on a platter and then having that event recast less than an hour later in a public forum in which the university and members of the community and press are present must have been humiliating. To not have the opporunity to receive the public thanks that you were due after your long service was criminal and inhumane and utterly outside the acceptable conventions of behavior that we expect at a university."
ELEVEN HONORABLE MENTIONS (No rank-order implied)
Reporter: "Excellent letter, Dr. Harper. Thanks."
Angeline: "Yes, a dean who tells it like it is - Harper will always be dean in my mind."
USM Sympatizer: "Wow. This is a wonderful letter, but also very sad. Imagine spending many years of your life helping to build a find school, only to have an incompetent wreck, in just a few years, much of what you struggled to construct. My hat (Metaphor Alert!, since I don't wear a hat) is off to Dean Harper.
Ellen Weinauer: "Thank you, Dean Harper. Your words are heartening - and remind us all over again of how much has been lost in the last two-plus years."
McCain and Able: "Superb letter by a strong man! I agree with others that I'll always refer to him as Dean Harper."
Amy Young: "Thanks, Dean Harper."
Monique de Guerre: "Thank you Dr. Hauer. I was grateful to get to know you briefly . . . C'est la guerre!"
truth4usm/AH: "As admirer of both (unfortunately former) Dean Harper and (unfortunately former) Assoc. Dean Hauer, I'm kicking this one for all it's worth."
Jameela Lares: "What a lovely tribute, Stan, for you to have posted to honor your long-time colleague."
Third Witch: "I hope more writers of Dr. Harper's stature will write letters."
young prof: "I am so proud of Dean Harper for having written this letter. Nothing in it could be construed as "sour grapes." I had the pleasure of working for Dr. Harper my first few years at USM. I have always said that "they don't make Deans like Terry Harper any more" and I firmly believe this to be the truth."
The entire Mr. Wonderful organization expresses its appreciation to Terry Harper, and extends its congratulations to all of this week's award recipients.