UNT contemplates at-will policy

I’m distresed today to learn that my former employer, the University of North Texas, is planning to implement an employment at-will policy with respect to staff. Some staff members at UNT (and others in the community around the university judging from the comments attached to this report from the Denton Record-Chronicle) are understandably disturbed and have publicly wondered what problem the new policy is intended to address.

My guess is that there is no problem. The new policy is being promulgated by Chancellor Lee Jackson, a Rick Perry appointee, who recently fired former university president, Gretchen Bataille. My guess is also that UNT is following the same style of corporate consolidation that is transforming many American institutions of higher learning. But the goal at UNT, which I still affectionately think of as North Texas, seems not merely to entail transfer of power from the traditional entities of academic governance into the hands of administrators and their corporate cronies in the profit-making world.

I’m thinking that the agenda at North Texas, as at other Texas state institutions of higher learning (though this is not happening without dissent), is to politicize the university system, to redefine educational objectives in favor of producing docile workers (who will likely vote Republican) rather than critical citizens, and to redefine university research agendas to support economic development and the business interests of wealthy corporations. It’s too bad. I used to love North Texas. Now, I suppose my employer of twenty-five plus years will become as remote to me as my Alma Mater, Southern Methodist University, which renamed the building I lived in as a freshman Clements Hall, in honor of a man who (however much he may have represented the Dallas business elite) did SMU a great deal of harm, though he’s now dead.

More recently, SMU has solicited and won the opportunity to house the George W. Bush Presidential library and its partisan think tank, over strong but poorly organized protests from faculty, staff and student groups, as well as Methodist ministers, and local interest groups.

I remember a number of conversations years back with the late A. C. Greene, who was a UNT faculty member for some years in the 1980s and 90s, in which A. C. expressed the conviction that UNT should form stronger alliances with Dallas business, establish a Dallas presence, and perhaps eventually move to the city. All of these things have now taken place, though UNT’s main campus remains in Denton; but I can’t imagine A. C., whose roots were in the same West Texas town as mine, countenancing UNT’s present top-down reorganization strategy, any more than I can imagine Willis Tate, who was SMU president when I was a student, tearing his shirt for George W. Bush.

Some changes here

I’ve removed some embedded videos that used a ton of memory and added a new WordPress plugin that enables a sharing feature on each post. This may be foolishness, since I’m not aware that readers are flocking to these pages. But the new buttons look nice, I think, and they work.

I’m also experimenting with a new theme. I don’t like everything about it, but I like the things I do like very much. So, we’ll see . . .

Small but mighty stays in the park

ABC News is reporting this morning that Brookfield Properties, owners of Zucotti Park, have postponed eviction of OWS protesters, while police in Denver have been less conciliatory with protesters at the State Capitol there. Meanwhile, the St. Louis Post Dispatch carried this fine editorial in this morning’s edition.

And it’s too bad the Cardinals lost last night, but one fan (who claims to represent a large group) is undaunted and left a letter to the editor as follows:

Small and mighty

I, Auggie, a Busch Stadium squirrel, represent the St. Louis Chapter of Major League Baseball Squirrels of America. We have stayed primarily in the bleachers for many years, heading for the high-priced sections only to snack on leftover peanuts and Cracker Jacks. But we were there when the Cardinals needed us and would appreciate the respect we deserve. We might be small, but we are mighty. Expect to see more of us. We shall not be fooled by traps with peanut butter. When the Cardinals need help, count on us to be there.

Try to trap us, and bad luck will prevail. Our ancestors helped the Cards win many very important games in Sportsman’s Park and a few in the “old Busch Stadium.” We are as much of baseball as Abner Doubleday.

Ron Henges • St. Louis

I am the last to know, sort of . . .

but I’m catching up. I’ve been trying to sort out the present wrangle in my church. South Carolina is only part of it—there’s lots of venom. But while I was reading at Mark Harman’s blog, I found the OWS list of grievances from September 26. A blogger at National Review Online who commented—“So a bunch of dirty hippies shut down the Brooklyn Bridge because Goldman Sachs is mean to chickens. Or something“—is off and on linked to a Goldman Sachs ad video, very slick. Another supercilious commentator addresses himself to “Ye of the Angry Left.” But I’m not sure this protest can be factored into today’s clichéd political categories. Here’s a rant that Mark Harmon agrees is incredible. It’s angry, but not on the left.