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SSK Says Goodbye

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SSK Says Goodbye


By Najib Aminy

"Oh no you didn't Gov Patterson."

In her final convocation as President, Shirley Strum Kenny addressed a packed audience of Stony Brook faculty and students alike, highlighting moments of her fourteen-year term. Emphasizing the importance of Stony Brook University to New York State, President Kenny dedicated a significant amount of her speech lamenting the budget cuts threatening both Stony Brook and the SUNY budget.

Stony Brook has already sustained a $7.4 million loss as part of the $50 million cut from the SUNY budget and is anticipating another $5.5 million cut. Kenny said the problem that Stony Brook and other SUNY and CUNY Universities face is not a “temporary discomfort,” but a need to state the importance of such institutions. “They are not mere social gestures; they are not safety nets; they are economic and social bedrock. They are our hope for the future, our guarantee against losing our primacy as a State,” said the 73-year-old Texas native.

Kenny went over the progression and evolution of Stony Brook University to emphasize the importance of why funding is so important. Citing an economic study on the Long Island economy, Kenny called Stony Brook University the economic engine of Long Island.  With $1.8 billion invested into the budget, Stony Brook is responsible for a return of $4.7 billion in the economic activity of Long Island. “And besides that, we are educating the next generation of scientists and business leaders,” added Kenny.

In terms of academia, Kenny boasted statistics of an increasing freshman class alongside a positive correlation of increased SAT scores. Along side the growing freshman class, Stony Brook’s number of applicants has doubled since Kenny’s inception as President in 1994; jumping up 103%, making Stony Brook the SUNY school with the highest number of applicants. “Only 37 four-year institutions in the country had more applications than Stony Brook; we had more applications than Stanford, Harvard, or Yale among others,” said Kenny.

Everyone was all smiles at the after-party

Everyone was all smiles at the after-party

The most important event, as Kenny described in her fourteen years, was Stony Brook’s admittance to the Association of American Universities in 2001, a prestigious organization formed in 1900 to “declare the equality of top American universities with those in Europe and to work together to ensure high quality in U.S. graduate degrees,” according to its mission statement. Stony Brook joins the likes of Harvard, Princeton, MIT in addition to the only one other SUNY school, the University of Buffalo. “For 44 years our aspiration had been election to this association of the the top research universities, public and private, in North America.” Since its inception alongside Texas A&M in 2001, no other university has been admitted.

In touching upon the many University projects she had worked on, such as the remodeling of the Javits Lecture Hall, the deconstruction of the Bridge to Nowhere, the renovation of the Academic Mall, and the building up of a Division-I athletic program, President Kenny mentioned how student tuition at Stony Brook has increased only once in the past thirteen years, the last of which was in 2003. Throughout that time, the undergraduate student population increased 40% from 17,200 to 24,000. With the increase of students came the increase of faculty and staff which rose 24% in the same period, ultimately from 11,200 to 13,900 paid professionals. “Clearly we need funding appropriate to our research mission—more money per student, not less,” said Kenny.

With the strong possibility of a net $13 million cut in the Stony Brook budget, changes will inevitably occur to make up for the loss of money. Tuition is speculated to increase sharply after the November election. In talks of the cuts, Kenny said, “if our present dire situation is a temporary—one year—problem, we can handle it, though unquestionably with discomfort, by redirecting some of our funding intended for equipment services.” However, if the budget dilemma prolongs into the coming years, “we have a very different situation,” said Kenny. Believing in keeping tuition as low as possible for students, Kenny is, as she said, “angry when students end up getting large tuition increases when the State decreases support for the university.” What stifles Kenny more is the fact that students could wind up paying an increased tuition for the same, if not reduced services that is currently provided, due to the budget cuts.

In closing her final State of the University address, President Kenny said the educational institutions of America, especially in New York, are facing troubling challenges and added that financial support of public higher education must be stressed to every local politician. “What we do here is vitally important. Those we teach here are the nation’s hope for tomorrow. The research we do is key to health and prosperity in the future. But we must have the funding necessary to achieve our mission,” said Kenny closing off her speech to a thunderous applause and standing ovation.

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The Amazing SpiderShirl: Richard Nasti and the Scholarly Six

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The Amazing SpiderShirl: Richard Nasti and the Scholarly Six


By Alex Nagler

Picture this only multiplied six times.

Picture this only multiplied six times.

For those of you who don’t know, President Kenny is retiring at the end of the year. A committee, headed by alumnus Richard Nasti, has been formed to find her replacement. Last week, elections were held by the faculty to choose six representatives to serve on the committee. When the ballots were counted, the following six professors emerged as the chosen representatives of the faculty body to select the person who, Albany Willing, will be the next President of Stony Brook University. These six professors constitute a wide variety of campus departments. Among their ranks are a Professor of Marine Biogeochemistry, a Nurse Practitioner and Dean of the School of Nursing, Professor and Chair of the Department of Technology and Society in the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, an English Professor, a History Professor, and a Professor of Medicine, Microbiology, Pathology and Pharmacology.

Together, they make up a wide slice of Stony Brook academic life and we wish them well as they embark on their quest to find the next President of Stony Brook University. Our thanks go out to Richard Nasti for agreeing to work with us.

Robert C. Aller

Robert Aller is a Distinguished Professor of Marine Biogeochemistry in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, with affiliated appointment in the Department of Geosciences at Stony Brook University. He is an expert on biogeochemical cycling processes and animal-sediment interactions in marine deposits, particularly tropical deltaic, coastal, and continental margin environments.  He received a B.S. in Biology-Geology and a B.A. in Chemistry, both with Highest Distinction from the University of Rochester in 1972, and a M.Phil. (1974) and Ph.D.(1977) in Geology and Geophysics from Yale University.  He rose to the rank of Professor of Geophysical Sciences at the University of Chicago from 1977 - 1986, and subsequently moved to Stony Brook University with his wife Josephine Aller, who is also on the faculty at SBU.  Their youngest daughter, Deborah, is a sophomore at Stony Brook.  Prof. Aller is a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union, the European Association of Geochemistry, and the Geochemical Society.  He has received honorary doctorates from Göteborg Université, Sweden and the Université de la Méditerranée (Aix-Marseille II), France, and was awarded the Division of Geochemistry Medal in 2007 by the American Chemical
Society.  He was a soccer and basketball coach in the Three Village community for 10 years, and serves as a director of the Stony Brook Environmental Conservancy.

Ora J. Bouey

Ms. Ora James Bouey is a Nurse Practitioner, Professor and Associate Dean, School of Nursing. Professor Bouey has held two major administrative roles and served as coordinator and/or Director of different programs on site and internationally. During her tenure at Stony Brook University, she has had firsthand experience within inter- professional groups and has consistently represented the interests of the students, faculty and staff of the HSC.  During the ‘80s, Professor Bouey was the first Chair of the Department of Adult Health Nursing which under her tutelage was developed into the largest department in the School of Nursing.

Professor Bouey has presented papers and continues to serve on local state, national, and international committees, advocating for the University at large. In 1980, she received the Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. Recently, she received the AFT’s Living the Legacy Award for 2008. This award is presented to women who have: Provided leadership and demonstrated interest in issues of women’s rights; maintained multiple decades of involvement in local, state and national affiliates; acted as mentors, coaches & role models for other women; and been recognized as a leader in her own community.
Professor Bouey graduated from Stony Brook University and New York University.

David L. Ferguson

David L. Ferguson is Distinguished Service Professor and Chair of the Department of Technology and Society in the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Stony Brook University.  Dr. Ferguson has been director or co-director of numerous projects, including eight National Science Foundation projects, aimed at improving undergraduate and graduate education in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). 

He is coordinator for the Math and Computer Science cluster of Science Education for New Civic Engagement and Responsibility (SENCER), an NSF-funded National Dissemination grant.  Professor Ferguson is Director of the NSF-funded SUNY LSAMP and SUNY AGEP programs—aimed at increasing the participation of underrepresented minority students in STEM.  His research includes quantitative modeling, problem solving, educational technologies, and decision making. His awards include the U. S. Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM), the Archie Lacey Award of the New York Academy of Sciences, and the Engineering Educator Award of the Joint Committee on Engineering of Long Island.

Peter J. Manning

Peter Manning graduated from Harvard College and earned his MA and Ph.D in English Language and Literature from Yale University. He taught at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Southern California, from both of which he received awards for excellence in teaching, before coming to Stony Brook as Chair of the Department of English in 2000. He is a specialist in literature of the British Romantic period, and has written or edited several books in the field. He has been given the Distinguished Scholarship Award of the Keats-Shelley Association, and held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Gary J. Marker


Dr. Gary Marker has been a member of the Stony Brook faculty, in the Department of History, since 1979.  His field of expertise is Russian history, with a special emphasis on the early modern period.  He is the author of many works touching upon print culture, gender, religion, education, and political authority.  He is a former chair of History, former Graduate Director, and he currently serves on the UUP Executive Committee as academic grievance officer for west campus.

Roy T. Steigbigel

Dr Steigbigel is Professor of Medicine, Microbiology, Pathology and Pharmacology at the medical school at Stony Brook.   He received his bachelor’s degree from Carleton College and the MD degree from the University of Rochester.  His subsequent training was also at Rochester as well as in the U. S. Public Health Service and at Stanford University.  After 10 years on the faculty at the University of Rochester he came to Stony Brook in 1983 to found the Division of Infectious Diseases and, shortly thereafter, the AIDS Treatment and Research Center.  He has been active in research, (with uninterrupted external funding since arriving at Stony Brook) and in multiple aspects of education, including the development and direction of courses. He serves on numerous national, regional, university-wide and medical school committees.  He is now President of the School of Medicine Faculty Senate.

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The Shirley Strum Kenny Art Festival Fiasco


For those of you who have followed The Stony Brook Press for any length of time, you know that our relationship with University President Shirley Strum Kenny has always centered on our role as the main student critics of her policies. We’ve never been what you’d call ‘chummy’ with her. This is Kenny’s final year as our University President. As such, we have decided to begin a countdown that will chronicle the most questionable, unfortunate and downright bizarre moments of her tenure.

President Kenny has served for fourteen years. There are fourteen issues of The Press due out before she leaves office. It seems only natural, then, to have fourteen moments on our countdown. We hope you will follow, and above all enjoy, this feature with each passing issue. Now, without further ado, we present number fourteen…

The Shirley Strum Kenny Art Festival Fiasco

For this moment, we reach back to just a few months ago. At the end of the spring 2008 semester, the school held its annual Shirley Strum Arts Festival with the headline “A Celebration of Student Expression.” One of the more prominent art pieces on display featured a wire mesh polar bear sculpture suspended over one of the Wang Center fountains. Now, what follows is still a little unclear, but what the sources told us was that Shirley, upon seeing this polar bear, demanded that it be removed from the exhibit. First, the reasoning behind this was that Shirley simply didn’t like it.  After realizing how that justification was total bullshit, a nonsense fire code violation was cooked up. Then, after feeling some heat from the student media (whoo yeah, go student media!) and the other artists in the show, Shirley decreed that the bear could remain on display for an additional few days. In the end, this whole debacle was just a big embarrassment for Shirley and the other powers that be. In addition, her major indecisiveness on the whole justification gave off the image of an old, senile leader at the university’s helm. However, we can’t wait for the next Shirley Strum Arts Festival which “Celebrates Student Expression!…so long as said expression doesn’t confuse or anger President Kenny.”

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Stony Brook Announces Plan For New State-of-the-Art Construction Site

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Stony Brook Announces Plan For New State-of-the-Art Construction Site


By Ross Barkan
Yesterday, President Shirley Strum Kenny recently announced plans for a brand-new construction site to be built on the plot of land currently used by the residents of Roosevelt Quad.

“I am happy to announce that Stony Brook University is continuing its progress as one of the leading universities in America,” Kenny said. “This new construction site will truly usher in a new age of sublime piles of dirt.”
Details of the project are still not completely clear, but as of press time, it is believed the construction site will cost upwards of $70 million. Costs include contracting a construction company, importing steel beams, digging foundations, and flying in genuine dirt.

“Yes, of course there will be dirt. Shitloads,” Kenny said.

During the press conference, President Kenny beamed about the audacious project and its implications for the student body. Swarmed by reporters and faculty, she assured them that the project would be fruitful.

“I am hopeful that our state-of-the-art construction site will give our students the much-needed facets of the quintessential college experience. The dirt spilling onto the sidewalks will be muddy and smell vaguely like sulfur.  The construction site will feature a variety of ear-splitting metal sounds. Hot water will no longer burden the showers of neighboring quads. Of course, we will also include little signs giving hope that something will actually be built. I am very excited.”

She added, “The sign could say something adorable and encouraging, like ‘new dormitories coming soon!’”

Construction site enthusiasts on campus applauded Kenny’s initiative. Sophomore Joshua Ginsberg grew up in a Chinese mountain range and is looking forward to a little slice of home.

“Yo, it would be pretty fucking awesome if they had these little sinkholes you could jump over. Like, you know, for a challenge, because it’s way more fun if you don’t know whether today’s the day you severely rupture your balls in a horrible hole-related injury.”

Ginsberg then leapt onto a table and played air guitar by himself.

A student named “Craig,” who refused to give his last name for fear of university reprisal opposed the project vehemently.

“There ain’t no fuckin’ rat zoo,” he said, gnawing on a leaf. “Ape City, U.S.A.”

Upon further review of Kenny’s plans, however, there indeed can be found a small crevice designated for rodents near the tip of the Kelly dining center. Some faculty members are also concerned about the extent of the project and what it will mean for the community. Philosophy professor Kirkland Sandstromton believes Kenny’s ambitions are misplaced.

“It is clear to me that this project is misguided. It undoubtedly lacks vision. Where I used to work-UC Berkeley-the school president commissioned entire pyramids of dirt to be dumped on the sites of student dormitories. But where are the pyramids here? Where is the creativity? I have to wonder, how is Stony Brook to become a trailblazer in the 21st -century when it cannot adequately ensure that every quadrangle hears the sounds of horrible, blood-curdling noise into the wee hours of the morning?”

The most affected quadrangle, Roosevelt, seemed to welcome the new project.

“Lots of dirt? Really loud forklifts? Grayish, shitty water?” asked Roosevelt resident Rudolph Milgrom about the details of the project. “Yeah, that’s sort of an upgrade.”

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President Kenny Announces Retirement

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President Kenny Announces Retirement


By James Laudano

In a mass e-mail sent to all Stony Brook students University President Shirley Strum Kenny announced her upcoming retirement, effective June 2009. Kenny was the first female President of Stony Brook University and has served in the position for fourteen years. The announcement comes on the heels of a few particularly difficult academic years for Kenny, during which she came under intense scrutiny from New York officials for her handling of a controversy involving infant mortality rates at the University Hospital and also from hundreds of faculty, students and staff for her decision to under-fund the College of Arts and Sciences.

“I take great satisfaction in Stony Brook’s achievements over these past fourteen years,” said Kenny. In fact, the Kenny era can be seen as one of unparalleled expansion in our University’s history. The campus expanded to include Stony Brook Southhampton and Stony Brook Manhattan. Buildings such as the Wang Center, the new Humanities Building and the rebuilt Heavy Engineering Building have gone up during her tenure. However, there has been some backlash from students and faculty over the past few years when Kenny made the choice to enroll at over 100% of the school’s capacity each subsequent year. The resulting strain on dormitory and facility space has left some questioning whether Stony Brook University should be expanding into places like Southhampton while there remains much that needs to be done on our main campus.

In the past, Kenny has taught at the Universities of Texas, Delaware and Maryland. She holds degrees in English and Journalism and earned her Ph.D from the University of Chicago. She has published five books, primarily concerning 18th century English drama.

Stony Brook has undoubtedly seen many academic, athletic and aesthetic improvements during Kenny’s time as President. However, as mentioned above, her tenure did not come without its fair share of contentious issues. It remains to be seen who will be in contention for the Presidency upon Kenny’s leaving office, and it is perhaps likely we will not know who will take the position until shortly before June 2009.

New Stony Brook Presidents are appointed by the State University Board of Trustees in Albany, based on a recommendation from the Stony Brook Council, a sort of local stand-in trustee board. As a result of historic student activism, students are represented by one member of the ten-person board. This seat usually alternates between the presidents of the undergraduate and graduate student governments. If that pattern holds, incoming Undergraduate Student Government President Jeffery Akita will be the voice of all students in the presidential selection process.

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Professors Accuse Kenny of Failing Students: One Petition Signer Shares His Concerns

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Professors Accuse Kenny of Failing Students: One Petition Signer Shares His Concerns


By Matt Willemain 

 Why are dozens of Stony Brook professors planning to formally accuse University President Dr. Shirley Strum Kenny of “egregious mismanagement”?           

Three hundred eighty-eight classes, scheduled for the fall semester by Stony Brook’s College of Arts and Sciences, were temporarily cancelled—and then restored—just days before class registration began.  This happened as Stony Brook reacted to rapidly changing information about how much money the New York State government would cut from the State University’s budget  (This story is reported in “Budget Cuts Spark Gloomy Rumors”, an article by Andrew Fraley and Najib Aminy in the previous issue of The Press).  For some members of the Arts and Sciences faculty, this brush with disaster pushed to the surface long simmering dissatisfaction with the spending priorities, and decision-making style, of the university’s leadership.

The College of Arts and Sciences is one of several units in which Stony Brook’s academic programs are divided.  Some of these divisions focus on one area, like the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, the College of Business and the School of Journalism.  In contrast, the College of Arts and Sciences is the all-purpose “everything else” group, and it encompasses most of the university’s academic programs.

Last week, The Stony Brook Independent, followed shortly by Newsday, reported that a petition had begun to circulate among the faculty, voicing “no confidence” in Dr. Kenny, and accusing her administration of neglecting the school’s main purpose, teaching undergraduates.  The petition has already collected over one hundred signatures.  After they have a chance to engage their peers and collect more signatures (a delay of possibly two weeks), organizers intend to deliver it to the president.  Speaking to Newsday on behalf of Dr. Kenny, an administration representative said that the president would not respond to the criticism until it is actually delivered.

The petition was written and circulated by a voluntary grouping of professors called the Concerned Faculty of Stony Brook, who chose to act independently, outside of both their labor union and the University Senate—a campus governance body similar to the faculty senates of most universities  (traditionally, a faculty senate would be the formal avenue for professors to engage the decision-making process at a university).

Herman Lebovics, a veteran Professor of History, was one of the first to sign the petition, and he spoke at length to The Press to elaborate on the criticism it expresses.  Describing the motivation of the petition organizers, Lebovics drew an analogy between recent campus events and New York City history.  He invoked the memory of the 1973 collapse of a section of the then-elevated West Side Highway, when a cement truck “fell through, and this caused a crisis.  The highway wasn’t sound—it was a disaster—and they had to tear it down.”  According to Lebovics, the revelation that the university was on the brink of cancelling nearly 400 classes “was the same kind of event.  It revealed to us that the structure was very damaged.”

The petition is available, in full, online at www.petitiononline.com/cfsb.  It begins by “expressing loss of confidence in the academic leadership of President Kenny,” and continues by listing problems related to “chronic and damaging under-funding of the academic sector” and the consequences of those problems for students and undergraduate education.  Among the problems cited are failures to increase the number of full time teachers and classrooms, while the number of students has risen drastically.  Among the consequences listed is the inability of students to get into the courses they need to graduate and limited individual attention available to students from the dwindling proportion of professors.

The professors who signed the petition seem to be upset about three facets of Dr. Kenny’s leadership.  First, they feel that the president’s choices of how to distribute money reflect poor prioritizing—that she neglects what should be the university’s main concern, undergraduate education.  Second, they feel that the president makes decisions in a secretive, authoritarian and thoughtless fashion.  Third, they feel that the president is more concerned with the way the university is perceived than its substantive work preparing students for professional life or other endeavors.  Lebovics summarized his complaints saying, “The school is being diminished.  The plan is to diminish it even more, and make up for that by buying ads in the New York Times.”

According to Lebovics, the Concerned Faculty of Stony Brook formed to express these concerns because “Faculty governance—the [University Senate] is kind of broken.”  Lebovics feels that the usefulness of the University Senate varies as different individuals within it take and leave positions.  Bernard Lane, current president of the University Senate (a body which is intended to represent the faculty on campus) was quoted in Newsday dismissing the criticism of those who signed the petition.  Lane said to Newsday, “I’ve thought that [Dr. Kenny] is doing a good job.”  Lebovics thinks that this “is not the sentiment of the faculty.”  Lebovics said of Lane, while allowing that he was not familiar with the senate president, “I don’t know what he’s talking about…I hope it’s obvious to you, as undergraduates, that things are not great.”

After delivering the petition, Lebovics says that “the plan is to meet with the president, which is normally hard to do because she isolates herself, and then perhaps continue the conversation with people to whom the president reports—Albany.” 

Some of the professors who have signed the petition have tenure and some do not.  Many of those whose jobs at Stony Brook aren’t as secure have chosen to “sign” anonymously.  When asked if he was concerned that supporters of the president’s leadership might try to diminish the impact of the petition by questioning the legitimacy of the unnamed signers, Lebovics acknowledged that possibility.  But he focused on the reasons behind the decisions to remain anonymous.  “It means they are scared.  The unpredictability about how this campus is run makes them nervous about what’s going to happen to them for opposing a president who is quite capricious.”  He continued, describing the non-tenured faculty who signed as “very disturbed about the future of the institution that they made a commitment to—they risk a lot.  I don’t blame them.  I told some people not to put their names on it because they are in delicate positions…That is not how a university should be run.”

Asked if he knew of studies that measure the impact of class size on learning, Lebovics spoke instead about his own personal experience, and maintained that “you don’t have to be a brain surgeon” to know that classes where students can interact with their professors in discussion and carefully reviewed papers provide a better education.  He said, “I used to teach cultural history to about 50 students; it’s now over 100.  I’ve been trying to puzzle over how I can give papers—how it’s anything other than a performance.”  Lebovics was confident that the reduction in academic budgets was hurting students.  “I know that the quality of their education is being diminished.  I know the students are having trouble fulfilling DEC requirements because they can’t get into our classes.  I know that the faculty to student ratio has been bad.”

The ratio of faculty to students on campus is a sore point for critics because a dispute between the Concerned Faculty and the Administration about the exact figure underscores the problems they have, not only with university leadership’s decisions, but also with the way those decisions are made.  The petition signers have estimated that over the past ten years (the majority of Dr. Kenny’s tenure as president), the faculty student ratio has worsened from 23:1 to 34:1.  The administration says this number is incorrect—but they will neither say what they believe the number is, nor publicly release the information needed to calculate it definitely.

Lebovics’ practical concerns about the opportunities afforded to students continued.  As the increase in the number of students reduces the amount of time professors have to dedicate to each, he said that the students “can’t get letters of reference; they don’t know the faculty…this is screwing them up for future studies.  The faculty members who are writing recommendations are writing many letters.  It is burdensome and there are glitches—the letters go awry.”  He is especially concerned about class sizes for juniors and seniors.  Traditionally, upper-division classes stress more individual attention on the student, as compared to large introductory lecture classes.  Lebovics says that Stony Brook doesn’t compare to other, similar, universities in this regard.

The petition claims Stony Brook has suffered “a loss of faculty morale and a disturbing flight of top faculty to well-run universities.”  Asked to substantiate this complaint, Lebovics said, “I won’t give you names, but I know three or four people who were good, who I respected a lot, who were courted by other campuses—offered not just pay but working conditions and funds for supporting their research.  None of this was matched very well by Stony Brook.  Stony Brook is not keeping up in a very good faculty market.”  He said that scholars see Stony Brook as “not a good or safe place…The general atmosphere that the president has created is that this not a place of academic activity, this is a branch of an advertising agency.”  He said that existing and potential professors expect they will not find fulfillment as teachers and scholars at Stony Brook.

Anthropology professor Pat Wright told Newsday that it was a mistake to blame President Kenny, as opposed to New York State politicians in Albany who fund the university from the state budget.  When asked if it was fair to blame Dr. Kenny, Lebovics acknowledged that there were some limits on how she could redistribute funds saying, “This is a really difficult technical question.  The State University [bureaucracy] is very restrictive…Yes, if they request money to increase sports facilities, that money couldn’t be used” for professors, classrooms and library books.

But he insisted that the president has enough flexibility that she should be held responsible.  “The president has centralized what discretionary money there is, in her hands.  Therefore, she has to take responsibility for the way it is disbursed.”  He cited the fluidity of funds from scientific research and the president’s ability to make specific budget requests as some of the tools available to Dr. Kenny to direct resources to different projects.  Highlighting to the president’s recent request for money for a new, multimillion dollar athletic facility, Lebovics said “I don’t know of any large budget requests for classrooms.”

“I’ve been here for 40 years—Albany is not always the culprit.  Some bad decisions have been made locally,” he said, comparing Stony Brook’s academic spending unfavorably with other schools in the SUNY system and citing decisions to indulge in side projects, like campus beautification and the potential Gyrodine monorail, at the expense of teaching. “We did not need a ‘stony brook’—the little cement river” between the Administration Building and the music wing of the Staller Center for the Arts.

Ultimately, Lebovics disagrees with Wright’s assessment that state leaders in Albany are to blame. “We’re obliged to manage, here,” he said, “and I think the priorities of the president are unexamined, not well thought out and profoundly damaging to our main mission in Arts and Sciences to present an education to [undergraduates].”

Lebovics disagrees not only with the decisions the president has made, but how she has made them.  He feels that tradition has been broken and the faculty have been cut out of the process.  “When a campus is run in this secretive, authoritarian fashion, the faculty has to guess what’s going on,” said Lebovics, “There are no planning documents about the big things.”

Lebovics illustrated this point about exclusionary decision making with an anecdote: he said that an unspecified senior scholar tried to figure out what went into the planning for the dramatic increase in undergraduate enrollment.  After a great deal of effort to bypass administration stonewalling, he was eventually told that there was no planning.  “That’s the way the campus is run,” said Lebovics, “There are no documents that we share with them [as a basis for consideration when the faculty and administration discuss the university’s future], which is very unusual and authoritarian.”

He contrasts this current practice with academic convention and the history of Stony Brook, specifically citing the presidency of Dr. John Marburger III.  Marbuger is the former Stony Brook president who now serves as Science Advisor to George Bush.  Under Marburger, says Lebovics, “we were given tons of information, and that doesn’t happen now.  We learn about [the university’s direction] from reading newspapers…Newsday, the New York Times, even the Port Jefferson Times Record.”

When asked if it was appropriate to temporarily neglect new faculty hires to pursue major expansion initiatives (such as the purchase of the Gyrodine facility, Southampton College and Touro Law School) because they represented unique opportunities for Stony Brook, Lebovics replied, “You don’t buy vacant houses and let them get destroyed.  There was no budget for Southampton.  Many buildings there have asbestos problems, and there’s no budget.  Many of the people running it are depressed and will leave their post.”  Lebovics says he has no problem with these and other expansion projects considered individually.  “It’s good that we own stuff—I have no problem with that—and we’re giving her the benefit of the doubt…But then we realized the price of that—the cost of that—the postponement of preëxisting obligations and the centering of money into everything, but our core mission.”

“This happened to Antioch College,” warned Lebovics, referring to the 156-year-old school in Ohio which shut down earlier this year, “They started creating satellite campuses everywhere and eventually the whole college went bankrupt, even though the satellites made money.”

Lebovics shared his opinion of Dr. Kenny’s judgment: “The decisions have not been made well, thoughtfully, intelligently or usefully for the mission of training people to go out into the world…That’s what a manager does.  He or she decides what are the priorities—and decides what is possible and not possible.  In this case, Dr. Kenny decides how we keep the mission of the university while we take advantage of windfalls.  These have not been wise decisions—they have not been planned—they have not been made on the basis of consultation with faculty members—they are going to turn around and bite us on the behind.”

“My sense, and the sense of my colleagues, is that the university is being run by press release,” Lebovics concluded.

 

 

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