UVA to Explore President’s Botched Ouster in Class



8 August 2012

 

By Jeanna Smialek

University of Virginia students will explore the ouster and reinstatement of the school’s president, Teresa Sullivan, in an oral history class that aims to capture the drama of the 17-day conflict.

Students in the course, which will be taught by two professors and labeled “Documenting U.Va.’s Future: Oral History of the Ouster and Reinstatement,” will collect interviews to compile a record of the saga for UVA’s library archive, according to a statement from the Charlottesville-based university.

“It’s a teachable moment about higher-education policy issues, about the relationship between democracy and education, and about students’ roles in their own civic life,” Walter Heinecke, an associate professor in the Curry School of Education and one of the professors teaching the course, said in the statement.

The university was plunged into turmoil on June 10th after Sullivan was forced to resign without a full vote of the school’s governing body. She was reinstated by unanimous vote less than three weeks later following student and faculty protests and a threat by Governor Bob McDonnell to fire the entire board.

Virginia’s library is gathering items related to the period of unrest, including student protestors’ signs. Archivist Gretchen Gueguen has compiled 80,000 tweets, 263 online articles and 123 blog posts, according to the statement.

The school’s library also plans to hold an exhibit on the events for students returning in the fall, according to the statement.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeanna Smialek in New York at jsmialek@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Lisa Wolfson at lwolfson@bloomberg.net



 
Number of Visits: 3084


Comments

 
Full Name:
Email:
Comment:
 

A section of the memories of a freed Iranian prisoner; Mohsen Bakhshi

Programs of New Year Holidays
Without blooming, without flowers, without greenery and without a table for Haft-sin , another spring has been arrived. Spring came to the camp without bringing freshness and the first days of New Year began in this camp. We were unaware of the plans that old friends had in this camp when Eid (New Year) came.

Attack on Halabcheh narrated

With wet saliva, we are having the lunch which that loving Isfahani man gave us from the back of his van when he said goodbye in the city entrance. Adaspolo [lentils with rice] with yoghurt! We were just started having it when the plane dives, we go down and shelter behind the runnel, and a few moments later, when the plane raises up, we also raise our heads, and while eating, we see the high sides ...
Part of memoirs of Seyed Hadi Khamenei

The Arab People Committee

Another event that happened in Khuzestan Province and I followed up was the Arab People Committee. One day, we were informed that the Arabs had set up a committee special for themselves. At that time, I had less information about the Arab People , but knew well that dividing the people into Arab and non-Arab was a harmful measure.
Book Review

Kak-e Khak

The book “Kak-e Khak” is the narration of Mohammad Reza Ahmadi (Haj Habib), a commander in Kurdistan fronts. It has been published by Sarv-e Sorkh Publications in 500 copies in spring of 1400 (2022) and in 574 pages. Fatemeh Ghanbari has edited the book and the interview was conducted with the cooperation of Hossein Zahmatkesh.