Anarchy And Terrorism On Campus, Fernandes Declares
NOTE: The online version of the Washington Post article first posted
on the Internet at approximately 11:30 pm Eastern Time has been
modified.
This sentence was added to the second version of the article, and did
not appear in the first version:
Gallaudet Trustees Split on Fernandes
Ex-Provost Seeks To Retain Support In Face of Protest
By Susan Kinzie
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 19, 2006; A01
Gallaudet University trustees have split in their support for incoming
president Jane K. Fernandes, a shift from their united front endorsing
her as the best person to lead the school for the deaf.
Last night, Fernandes said some members of the board of trustees have
asked her to resign amid growing pressure from a coalition of students,
faculty, alumni and staff who oppose her.
Of the 20 trustees, three of whom are members of Congress, perhaps as
many as seven do not support Fernandes becoming president, according to
three sources close to the board who spoke on condition of anonymity
because board consultations are private. Fernandes, who had been
provost, is to take office in January.
Fernandes said she has begun contacting trustees individually to shore
up, and gauge, support.
“I honestly don’t see how this is going to be resolved,” she said last
night. “I don’t see a clear way for this to be resolved. I’m going to
go home and think hard about that, talk with my husband and family.
Almost any option I think of is not wholly a good one.
” . . . I’m not really thinking of resigning, no. But I’m trying to
think of how . . . to work from now until January to be in a position
to be where I can be effective.”
Some trustees have called for an emergency meeting to discuss the
crisis that has gripped the school in Northeast Washington, and some
have threatened to resign.
Critics give varied reasons for opposing Fernandes, including
long-simmering frustrations with the board’s presidential search. To
some, she is viewed as the wrong leader for Gallaudet, the academic and
cultural heart of the world’s deaf community, in part because she was
born deaf but did not learn sign language until she was an adult.
In a frank e-mail to trustees, a copy of which was provided to The
Washington Post yesterday by someone other than Fernandes, the
president-designate explained why she is determined to stay. She asked
trustees not to resign or call for her to step aside.
{{{”What we are dealing with on campus is anarchy and terrorism,” she
wrote.}}} [This paragraph was added, and was not in the first version
of the article]
If she were asked to leave or be fired, the e-mail also said, “the
University and in particular the Board of Trustees will undergo intense
scrutiny from Congress. I venture to guess Congress will ask why you
did not perform your fiduciary duties to the University. And you will
have to explain.”
The majority of the private university’s funding comes from the federal
government.
Escalating protests on campus have essentially paralyzed the school in
the middle of the fall semester and riveted attention in the deaf
community nationally.
Last week, students shut down the school by blocking all entrances for
three days, a standoff that ended with the arrest of more than 130
protesters. Earlier this week, faculty members voted resoundingly for
Fernandes to resign or be removed. They expressed an overwhelming loss
of confidence in the board and, by a much smaller margin, conveyed a
loss of confidence in outgoing president I. King Jordan.
Jordan, a strong Fernandes supporter, became a hero for the deaf 18
years ago when student protests brought him into office.
In public, the trustees have strongly backed their choice of Fernandes,
whose appointment in May set off the protests that heated up again
earlier this month. Fernandes is to take office when Jordan steps down.
“I believe that Dr. Fernandes needs to be given a chance,” board
Chairman Brenda Jo Brueggemann said yesterday. “She was appointed to a
position, and she was not even given a chance. She was our most
qualified candidate for this position.”
No board meeting had been scheduled as of yesterday afternoon,
Brueggemann said. “As I keep repeating, the board’s role is oversight,
and not to run the daily business of the campus. That’s what we appoint
the president to do.”
Yesterday, Fernandes was trying to contact individual trustees by
e-mail, pager and videophone, and meeting them in person if possible,
to save her promotion. Meanwhile, sources said, her opponents have
lined up a candidate they say they hope will take her place.
Fernandes’s e-mail to trustees was prompted in part by word that some
board members might resign, she said. “It’s important for the board to
stay together. . . . We need all of them together now more than ever.”
The three members of Congress on the board have a full vote: Sen. John
McCain (R-Ariz.), Rep. Ray LaHood (R-Ill.) and Rep. Lynn C. Woolsey
(D-Calif.). McCain has not spoken publicly on the issue. In a
statement, Woolsey did not take a position on Fernandes, saying only
that she hopes for a quick end to the turmoil. LaHood did not return
calls.
Protesters say they plan to march to Capitol Hill this week, just as
students did nearly two decades ago with “Deaf President Now”
demonstrations that swept Jordan into office.
Opposition to Fernandes had been building for a long time. Early in her
11-year career at Gallaudet, she angered teachers in one program by
eliminating tenure. When Jordan named her provost without a full search
six years ago, faculty passed a resolution condemning it. This year, as
the search for Jordan’s successor unfolded, black students in
particular questioned the selection process in part because a strong
African American candidate did not make it to the final round.
Fernandes promotes inclusiveness and is working on a diversity
initiative, but her critics point out that there are few black or
Hispanic professors or administrators at Gallaudet.
Some critics have said that her actions since May have widened the
divide at the school. For example, when Fernandes defined the
controversy as a question of whether she was “deaf enough,” the
protesters — who insisted that was not the reason for their opposition
– compared it to playing “the race card.”
]]]For some, Fernandes symbolizes a threat to deaf culture, which has a
tradition based around sign language. She has said that she has deep
respect for sign language and wants to preserve it but that the
school’s future depends on welcoming students with all types of
deafness and means of communicating.[[[ [This paragraph was removed
from the second version]
Technology, such as cochlear implants, has made it increasingly easy
for deaf students to communicate with hearing people, rather than
immersing themselves in the deaf community.
{{{Fernandes has said that she has deep respect for sign language and
wants to preserve it but that the school’s future depends on welcoming
students with all types of deafness and means of communicating.}}}
[This paragraph was added to the second version]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/18/AR2006101802035_2.html?nav=rss_metro
>”What we are dealing with on campus is anarchy and terrorism,” she wrote.
This sentence was deleted and does not appear in the second version:
>For some, Fernandes symbolizes a threat to deaf culture, which has a
>tradition based around sign language.
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About
Mishka Zena is reporting on the Gallaudet University Protests.
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“What we are dealing with on campus is anarchy and terrorism”?
Looks like JKF is grasping at the last few straws.
She _is_ dealing with anarchy and terrorism on campus.
See Jane Gone!
See Jane say bye!
See Jane Good Riddance!
My message to the Gallaudet Board of Trustees
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbWcDKkM_x8
Richard
There is a story behind what was added and what was deleted.
DPG
I have never heard of anything in half of this article. Back up canidate? Hogwash. I need to see evidence to support this article before I believe anything written in it.
Dianrez, what is the story behind what was added and deleted?
Brenda Jo, how much longer do we have to hear this utter nonsense about “giving Jane a chance”? SHE HAD HER CHANCE!!
Brenda Jo, how much longer do we have to hear this utter nonsense about “giving Jane a chance”? SHE HAD HER CHANCE!! She has been at Gallaudet more than 10 years. If she was a good person and a good worker, people would have welcomed her with open arms as president. Instead, she burned bridges and made enemies left and right and now she is paying the price for her own behavior, nothing else. I am very glad she is getting her comeuppance because I have personally suffered at the hands of people like her and can’t figure out how they get away with it. I am very glad Jane Fernandes is not getting away with it!
Wondering, look out for the bold sentences in the article. They were either added or deleted.
As I read this part of article: “Fernandes said that she will stay, that she has support. The faculty asked, without 82% of the support of the faculty, what can Fernandes do as a leader? Fernandes told them that she had a plan and that she wouldn’t tell them what the plan was because she’s currently focused on current issues that are popping up and adjusting the plan as she goes.”
To my opinion that JKF wouldn’t tell them what the plan was, she is not going to get the chance from us to give her! Why? She won’t lead us “good TEAMwork”. Someone (sorry I forgot name) told me “One Famous Deaf man, (I think but I am not sure if it’s Frank Turk’s) quoted with the fingerspelled as T.E.A.M. stands for Together Everyone Achieve More”.
Look at JKF won’t tell the faculty what is her plan? Whoa!!!! That proofs us that she will NOT COOPERATING with us! That’s not UNITY! She is acting like “Me, Me, Me”, the Mrs. Know Everything Attitude just like not wanting to cooperating as a TEAMwork! That’s JKF’s entirely (mocking or teasing) hostile behaviours towards the faculty!
The faculty who strive their serve to the community! They do deserve the united cooperating as TEAMwork! The faculty do not need to feel LEFT BEHIND!
Also I read “because she’s currently focused on current issues that are popping up and adjusting the plan as she goes.” That proofs that she wants to have WAR with us by going and making her own plans to adjust the medias blaming on the protesters and our deaf community!!!
Whenever JKF and her cronies see anything popping up out from us,the protesters’ words and who cannot understand our different diversity ASL body language stylish, JKF and her cronies will be stubbornly ACCUSE and BLAME on us, the deaf community and the protesters!
Blaming will NOT resolve the crisis! We do NOT NEED the “BLAMING” and “NOT GOOD ENOUGH” Leader!
Hope that helps the protesters to feel better and be strong to stay in peaceful for this weekend!
Long Live the Peaceful Protester!
Respectfully yours, FF
Excellent point, Frozen Face. She is so out of touch with Gallaudet Community.
I don’t know if she is authorized to speak out on the behalf of BoT. It’s my understanding that the BoT has the responsiblity to make their own decisions, then theirs to make announcements to Gallaudet Community