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By Mike Cuenca | February 15, 2002
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It's gratifying that the Journal-World is speaking out so directly
about the serious problems facing faculty and students at KU. Yes, KU
is a mess — both on the Lawrence campus and at KU Med. The
institution's governance structure has become so corrupt that no one
can be sure that they'll receive due process in any proceeding at KU.
Lingering racist and sexist attitudes that have long contributed to
underutilization of minorities and women have continued without any
serious effort to eliminate them or to educate those involved in
inappropriate employment practices. Meanwhile, the administration's
determined, dedicated efforts to defend those attitudes and practices
has produced a culture of abuse, cover-up, and retaliation. KU's solid
reputation for educational integrity has been diminished greatly and
replaced by a flimsy facade of Merit scholars as many quality faculty
and graduate students either leave because of their frustrations with
the current climate or are driven away for opposing it.
Compare what's happened with Enron to what's happened at KU. Think
about how often you've heard that Hemenway wants to "deregulate" KU. He
wants to take the classified employees out of the civil service, to
remove oversight of how KU spends its money and to circumvent state
regulations for construction projects. He used KU's connections in the
courts to circumvent civil rights law, ignored the university's own
guidelines for physical expansion into the neighborhoods surrounding
campus and fought against the examination of the handling of the
Watkins Trust. He frequently acts without consultation with or concern
for those his actions affect, and he has time and again proven that the
quality of education and fair treatment of members of the KU community
come second to his empire-building objectives.
Haven't you heard the adage that minorities and women are always "the
last hired and the first fired?" Some of us have been canaries in the
coal mine of KU for the past several years, sounding the alarm that
things are spiraling out of control. If you continue to ignore the
canary's warning, the restoration of KU's status and integrity will
take much longer and be much more difficult and painful.
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Originally published by the Lawrence Journal-World.
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