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Psywar1-0
06-26-2005, 21:55
June 26, 2005


Professor enmeshed in flap over collegiality


William C. Bradford is a patriot, a veteran and an Apache Indian.

But is he "collegial"?

More on that in a bit. He fought in Desert Storm and Bosnia-Herzegovina, served as a major in the U.S. Army Special Forces and received the Silver Star.

Now the 39-year-old legal scholar is engaged in a battle on the home front -- political correctness in academia.

In 2001, Bradford was hired as an associate professor at Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis. His expertise is international law, federal Indian law and national security/foreign relations law. He has four degrees, including one from Harvard Law.

But he's under fire, he said, because his ideas about the war on terror do not conform to views held by Professors Mary Harter Mitchell, 52, and Florence Wagman Roisman, 66.

They are tenured, a status Bradford is seeking. Bradford said the two women have voted consistently to deny him tenure, despite good academic ratings.

In March 2004, he said, he was told during a review that someone described him as "uncollegial."

That's the new kiss-of-death buzzword. "Faculty seeking to get rid of others claim they are not collegial," Bradford said.

Bradford wrote a defense of the flag after 9/11 -- one that hung in the school lobby until some faculty objected.

He refused to sign a letter sent by Roisman defending Ward Churchill. He's the Colorado professor who called victims of 9/11 "little Eichmanns."

Roisman would not comment specifically on Bradford's collegiality or lack thereof. She denied his politics was the issue.

Professor Henry Karlson, a respected senior faculty member, finds Bradford collegial and more. "He's perhaps the finest young man we have recruited."

But, yes, there is a problem. "Some members of the faculty, for reasons I cannot ascertain, are trying, for lack of a better term, to drive him away."

Students have voted Bradford their favorite teacher.

Mitchell long has been an anti-war activist. She did not return three calls on Friday.

Roisman said she is a proud member of the left. "I am a person of very progressive politics," she said. "Everybody there would tell you I am the most to-the-left person (on the faculty.)"

In winter 2003, Roisman made news for objecting to a tree with ornaments in the school lobby. After it was removed, she successfully lobbied against a new display -- an Indiana winter scene.

Then-Dean Tony Tarr weathered that storm, then resigned in 2004.

The new, interim dean is Susanah Mead, a longtime faculty member.

On Friday, Mitchell and Roisman threw a party for Mead. Only women faculty and staff were invited. Mead acknowledged she heard some rumblings about sexism.

Bradford laughed. "If a male dean came in, and only male faculty held such an event, can you imagine the outrage?"

There he goes again -- being uncollegial.

Ruth Holladay's column appears Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday. You can reach her at (317) 444-6405 or via e-mail at ruth.holladay@indystar.com

Bill Harsey
06-26-2005, 22:01
Honor Diversity.

"As long as your not different from us..."

Edited to add: This goes to the above article, does anyone here know the history of the term Progressive in United States politics?

Bill Harsey
06-26-2005, 23:17
This is a good example of Harsey's Axiom which is,


"Those for whom everything is provided have the luxury of condemning those who provide"



The womyn professors in this case wouldn't exist as they know it without the freedom won and safety provided by the United States military.

Goggles Pizano
06-27-2005, 06:49
Oh no, not again! When will these folks just die off and allow our children to finally be educated rather than indoctrinated? I'm sorry to hear the Major is having such a difficult time. :mad:

FILO
06-27-2005, 07:37
While in graduate school, I was elected a student representative and thus I experienced faculty meetings and had my first glimpse behing the curtain. Soon I realized there was an inverse relationship between a person's level of education and their maturity. After graduating, I taught for 11 years as an adjunct faculty member at a large university. Again I witnessed first-hand the same dysfunction within the department; mainly seriously inflated egos with agendas ruled the day.

Huey14
06-27-2005, 07:45
If the gentleman can't get another job in the States, he's more than welcome here.

jasonglh
06-27-2005, 09:23
Wow I bet the Alumni are very proud to see their school in the paper this way.

Tell him to come down to the University of Kentucky the colors are much nicer. :D

Gypsy
06-27-2005, 11:01
Positively disgusting.

My grandmother always wanted me to go into teaching. Had I done so I would probablyy have been unemployed in fairly short order.

Roguish Lawyer
06-27-2005, 11:11
Welcome to the world of academia. This should not surprise anyone. There is a battle there that has been raging for 40 years, and we are a weak insurgency now.

Gypsy
06-27-2005, 11:16
No...it isn't *surprising* RL, but my disgust continues to escalate to new levels every time I hear about this type of situation.

mumbleypeg
06-27-2005, 16:30
Honor Diversity.

"As long as your not different from us..."

Edited to add: This goes to the above article, does anyone here know the history of the term Progressive in United States politics?


Do you mean progressive as in "Fellow Travellers?"