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Hate to admit it but the DTH has been doin' yeoman work. Sure , they slobber some but they also do stuff like this...


More evidence emerges on Jan Boxill


The Wainstein report was not the new page Jan Boxill expected to turn, she once said.


According to the report by independent investigator Kenneth Wainstein, the sports ethics scholar steered athletes to fake classes in the Department of African and Afro-American Studies to help them maintain eligibility to play and graduate.


In a spring interview with The Daily Tar Heel, Boxill, former chairwoman of the faculty, said she never got the chance to completely push her conversations with faculty beyond the academic scandal.


"We were expecting a new page, but I'm not sure we got it," Boxill said in April. "There's not one Faculty Council meeting I had in my three years that athletics isn't brought up. Either I do, the chancellor does or the Faculty Athletics Committee. With the announcement of the Wainstein review, it was another page but not the kind of page we may have thought."


Emails show Boxill, a philosophy professor, offered 160 independent study courses between spring 2004 and spring 2012, according to records obtained by The Daily Tar Heel.


Wainstein's report found employees in the African and Afro-American studies department offered fake paper courses for 18 years - and Boxill encouraged athletes to take the classes. But the Wainstein report, like every report on unc's academic-athletic scandal, has found the academic irregularities were limited to the African and Afro-American studies department.


But emails released as supplementary documents with the Wainstein report show athletes were also steered to independent study courses Boxill taught. The philosophy professor and former director of the Parr Center for Ethics did not respond to requests for comment for this story.


Boxill was embedded in unc and its athletics program. A master lecturer in the philosophy department, she taught a long-standing class on sports ethics and brought in regular guest speakers like men's basketball coach Dean Smith. As faculty chairwoman, she attended regular meetings with former Chancellor Holden Thorp's administration.


Her popularity was not limited to undergraduates and colleagues - women's basketball players emailed her often. Players opened their friendly messages with "Hey mom" and "Hey pal."


unc women's basketball coach Sylvia Hatchell said Boxill completely oversaw the teams' academics, making herself available for players at all hours of the day. Hatchell said she never saw any red flags.


Hatchell remembers one instance of Boxill discussing the civil rights movement with players on the bus. Boxill, who grew up during the 1960s, told the players stories about Martin Luther King, Jr.


"That's why she was so good," Hatchell said. "She had such a connection with the athletes."


Independent studies under Boxill


Marc Lange, the current chairman of the philosophy department said independent studies are uncommon because the department has wide course offerings. Geoffrey Sayre-McCord, chairman of the department between 2001 and 2011, said more than 150 independent studies is an unusually large number.


"Why would a student take an independent study?" Lange said. "It's only for extraordinarily well-qualified students for whom the course material is too elementary."


Public records show Boxill would sometimes offer multiple students independent study courses each semester; for example, in spring 2005 she taught 20. unc's Public Records Office would not distinguish how many students enrolled in Boxill's independent studies were student-athletes.


The emails released by Wainstein show some student-athletes were enrolled and steered to her courses - but his report doesn't mention it.


In one case, Crowder referred a student to Boxill for an independent study course after the African and Afro-American studies department was no longer able to provide them - but that wasn't the only instance.


In a 2006 email to Deborah Crowder, the secretary in the African and Afro-American studies department who Wainstein showed was largely responsible for the creation of the paper courses, football counselor Cynthia Reynolds discussed registering her players for new classes.


"Nice call on the Phil 30 (Boxill) correspondence course last semester," the email said. "Didn't know Jan was doing those."


In emails from later that year, Reynolds asked Boxill to take on a student for an independent study on sports ethics.


In another case, women's soccer counselor Brent Blanton referred a student to Boxill who was looking for an independent study. In an email to Blanton, the student said she didn't care if the course was "basket weaving."


As of fall 2012, faculty are only permitted to offer two students independent study courses per semester.


Lange said he can count on one hand the number of independent study courses he's taught since joining unc in 2003.


Men's basketball tutor Janet Huffstelter emailed Boxill in 2007, asking her for advice on an upcoming quiz in philosophy.


"(Redacted) had a tough week," Huffstelter said. "I'm sorry he waited until the last minute to call me in for help. I guess it's not unusual, though."


Boxill responded with at least six specific questions that could be on the quiz, according to the emails.


Almost all of Boxill's emails that were released were either her talking about, or to, students. "I will do whatever I can to help you obtain your degree," she said in one email.


In another: "Just talked with Betsy Taylor in Steele Bldg, and she said she is making you a candidate for May, and that we are correct-all you need to do to is to PHIL with an A-!! And THAT will be done!!! This so great."


One student emailed Boxill, asking why she hadn't heard from Boxill about the independent study course in a few weeks. Another student was looking for a way to get six hours to keep his or her Pell Grant, and Boxill suggested six hours of a philosophy or African and Afro-American independent study.


Another student asked for an extension on a paper, and Boxill replied: "I have to say this is getting ridiculous! You have had the entire term to do *VERY MINIMAL* work."


In 2009, Boxill said she might apply for Wayne Walden's position as a tutor for the men's basketball team, saying coaches Roy Williams and Joe Holladay "would be grateful" if she did apply - or they would also be comfort able with Mary Willingham.


Philosophy students now must fill out an independent study request form, which is submitted to the Director of Undergraduate Studies, who will send it to members of the Undergraduate Committee.


The only person who would know whether academic irregularities occurred in Caldwell Hall classrooms is Jan Boxill, Lange said.


"It's only recently that the University required independent studies to have that kind of paper trail."


That highly autonomous academic culture is exactly what led to unc's academic-athletic scandal, according to the Wainstein report.


"This hands-off management approach was laudable as a means of fostering academic creativity but lamentable as a mechanism for detecting and preventing the type of academic misconduct that existed in the AFAM department for so many years," Wainstein found.


'Horribly betrayed'


Colleagues, like Coach Hatchell, said Boxill was one of the most ethical people they'd ever met.


The findings of the Wainstein report largely misrepresented Boxill, said Kit Wellman, chairman of the Washington University in St. Louis' philosophy department. He studied under Boxill and now, even in light of the Wainstein report, considers her one of his heroes and models.


"She feels horribly betrayed by a University she served selflessly for decades," he said.


After initial reports of academic fraud, Wellman said Boxill was shocked.


"The idea that she was complicit and knew the stuff was going on is utterly implausible," he said. "The investigators have to come to their conclusions. I don't believe it."


Senior Colleen Ciszek said Boxill's compassionate nature made her a great mentor - she once helped Ciszek when she went through a tough time.


"I definitely don't think this was ever a giant scheme to push some agenda and undermine the integrity of the University and athletics on campus," she said. "She's always been such a good advocate for those who are disadvantaged."


The usual bs testimonials from some friends at the end of the article but , clearly , Boxill was up to her teeth in this and AFAM was nowhere NEAR the only department involved. Besides...lest we forget , AFAM was the ONLY one Wainstein was charged to investigate. Again , unx tried to limit the scope of the investigation. Go figure. Geez Louise...steering jocks to fraudulent classes , e-mailing test answers to "student" athletes , guaranteeing good grades to jocks , near-universal criticism from others in her department.....oh and Roy KNEW Mary Willingham...very well , it seems. He's a lyin' sack too but we already knew that. Anyway , if this was Duke the athletic department would be a memory. At unx , Boxill still has her job. Seriously. Can't blame unx too much for that though. She knows where a ton of bodies are buried. Pizz her off and there's no tellin' who she throws under the bus.
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UNC-CHeat
 
Forgot to highlight this from the Bob Lee link....


IF unc COULD field an ACC-competitive FB team of all Matt & Bryns (and Dannys), they would. Matt & Bryn are very Low Maintenance. The Tydrekes and Marvins and Rashads and Greg Littles; well, they're NOT so Low Maintenance. But they are very very good football players. Matts & Bryns don't even need Mary or whatshisname that hates Mary so much.


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Rats deserting...
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Derek Rowles ‏@DerekRowles


#unc General Counsel, Leslie Strohm, who tried to block the release of public records in unc scandal is leaving.. Taking job at Louisville.

UNC-CHeat
 
Panel criticizes Wainstein report's public interpretation


In the wake of Kenneth Wainstein's investigation, students, faculty and administrators are concerned that some interpretations of his report have raised misconceptions about the African-American community.


Such was the topic of discussion in a panel hosted Thursday by the unc Black Student Movement, the carolina Black Caucus and the unc NAACP.


The discussion, called "The Black and Blue of carolina: Post-Wainstein," featured panelists Eileen Parsons, associate professor of science education; Katharine Bailey, unc junior and NAACP political action committee chairwoman; and Cricket Lane, assistant athletic director for student-athlete development.


"In terms of the report, it did what it was supposed to do," Parsons said. "It followed the paper trail, and, unfortunately, the paper trail led to the (African, African American and diaspora studies) department."


But she said some of the framing in the report was skewed and could lead people to make false assumptions about the proportion of African-American students who took paper classes.


Bailey said the report devalues the AAAD department.


"If it takes requiring an AAAD class as a gen ed, I'm all for that," Bailey said. "The ignorance is outstanding."


Senior Jennell McIntosh, unc NAACP president, noted how easily people make false assumptions about the report.


"A lot of people have a glossed-over version of this account after reading it on Twitter or from friends," McIntosh said.


Chancellor Carol Folt was among those in attendance.


"I feel awful about it," Folt said. "And yet somehow, I wake up every morning really excited, and this is because this place is so incredible. I feel a deep obligation to make sure you don't feel your degree is tarnished."


Those at the panel agreed that open conversations about the report's racial implications should continue.


"We have a chancellor that is listening, that is paying attention," history professor Genna McNeil said. "We can't be a No. 1 public university unless everyone knows there are safe spaces you can go."


McIntosh stressed the importance of student initiative moving forward.


"It's important to remember (the panel) was student-organized," she said. "Hearing from faculty is great, but it's the students that need to be the change in the University."


Other students asked for change from higher authority.


"The time to do something is now," senior Toyosi Oyelowo said. "I am tarnished to the point of tears. I'm black and blue. But I stand, and I need a system that stands for me."



unx devalued AFAM and the AFAM students who also participated in athletics. unx did that by trying to scapegoat AFAM when other departments were also involved. They also did it by treating the black athletes as commodities to exploit for ill-gotten athletic gains. Any stigmatizing of AFAM is unx's sole responsibility.

UNC-CHeat
 
Carol Folt ‏@ChancellorFolt


Welcome back to @uncWBBCoach! So happy to have you back on the sidelines Coach Hatchell. #GDTBATH


John Broward‏@ACCRecruitingXP


@ChancellorFolt @uncWBBCoach when is jan boxill bobble head night?


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UNC-CHeat
 
KEY PLAYER IN unc SCANDAL LEAVING CHAPEL HILL


Leslie Strohm, unc's vice chancellor and general counsel, has been named vice president for strategy and general counsel at the University of Louisville, the university announced Friday.


Strohm was one of the key players behind a public records battle with the media as reporters attempted to look into a scandal involving student athletes and allegations of academic misconduct. unc, with Strohm's legal advice, used the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) to deny numerous public records requests at the height of the scandal.


Attorneys for ABC11 and eight other media organizations sued unc, claiming the university was illegally stifling public records requests stemming from the initial football investigation that led to NCAA sanctions.


Among the records the media was fighting for; un-redacted phone records, player parking tickets, and a full list of tutors including salaries.


ABC11 and other media outlets won the lawsuit, and the records were released.


Strohm has remained a key legal figure, advising unc during a second investigation by Kenneth Wainstein.


"I am grateful that while contemplating this new opportunity at Louisville, Leslie decided to stay with us through the end of the independent investigation led by Kenneth Wainstein," Chancellor Carol Folt said in a campus email message.


Strohm, who has served three unc chancellors over more than 11 years, will remain at carolina until mid-January.


Chancellor Folt said she would announce plans soon for interim leadership in the Office of University Counsel and launch a national search.

UNC-CHeat
 
DevilDJ ‏@DevilDJ32


http://www.dailytarheel.com/article/2014/1...-interpretation … @mmountshoop @newsom_cookie @TGibbsABC11 @RAnneShirley @RevBarberII unc devalued AFAM/caused "false assumptions"


Marcia Mount Shoop ‏@mmountshoop


@DevilDJ32 thank you for sharing this.


John Broward ‏@ACCRecruitingXP


@DevilDJ32 @mmountshoop @newsom_cookie @TGibbsABC11 @RAnneShirley @RevBarberII the silence from mr barber on this issue is deafening


Cookie Newsom ‏@newsom_cookie


@DevilDJ32 @mmountshoop @TGibbsABC11 @RAnneShirley @RevBarberII sounds like they are satisfied with an admin that never mentions race.SMH

UNC-CHeat
 
"Education is expensive, so we have to make sure we get the best bang for our buck," he says. "We've got to make sure every course we are offering ... there is a return on that investment ... We can't afford easy types of courses," offering a not-so-subtle dig at the recent controversy at unc-Chapel Hill.

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UNC-CHeat
 
Congrats to unx. The "Gold Standard" of cheating...
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Safeguards to prevent unc-like scandal in place at Virginia Tech since 1987


Almost a decade before a University of North carolina-Chapel Hill staff member began a program designed to give a GPA bump to more than 1,000 students, many of whom were athletes, began, Virginia Tech was facing issues with athlete academics as well.


Hundreds of classes over an 18-year period at the University of North carolina-Chapel Hill required students simply to turn in a single paper - many with extensive plagiarism - to receive either an A or B grade both as an effort to keep student-athletes eligible to play and an effort to help struggling students get a GPA bump, according to an independent review by attorney Kenneth Wainstein.


In 1987, Virginia Tech faced NCAA sanctions for as many as 13 violations that included a faculty member trying to award an independent study course grade to a basketball player before the player had completed the course...the violations, although not as far reaching as those at unc,


Virginia Tech's issues led to the safeguards and a change in culture that officials say prevent a unc-like scandal from occurring in Blacksburg

UNC-CHeat
 
I wrote a game story that complimented carolina's execution of Smith's ball-control game plan -- a "Picasso," I called it -- and Smith never forgot it.


Over the next 30 years, whenever he and I crossed paths, Smith mentioned that 1966 story. He said it came when he needed a pat on the back.


Using the victory over UK as an early-season impetus, the Tar Heels went on to earn Smith a berth in the 1967 Final Four in Louisville's Freedom Hall. I was assigned to cover the team's arrival at Standiford Field. When the players disembarked, waving small, Confederate flags, nobody thought it amounted to any more than regional pride. (Nevertheless, Dean didn't like it when I mentioned it years later.)


He emphasized academics, -- building an outstanding graduation rate -- and was committed to compliance with the NCAA. He introduced the "Four Corners" delay game that eventually forced the NCAA to adopt a shot clock. No detail was too small to escape his micro-management.


Whenever I'd get into an argument about cheating, I'd always cite North carolina as Exhibit A of a highly successful program that did things the right way.


But North carolina was the rock. Whenever a radio caller would insist that everybody cheats, North carolina was my go-to program for proof that he (or she) was wrong.


But today I'm devastated. I feel betrayed. Never in my wildest dreams could I envision the mother of all academic scandals happening at North carolina. But the facts are as indisputable as they are mind-boggling. For almost 20 years, going back to the end of Smith's hallowed era, the university offered a bogus course in African-American Studies that was taken by many student-athletes.


I believed in carolina's academic integrity so strongly that I didn't pay much attention in 2011, when the Raleigh News & Observor began to report about widespread academic fraud at unc.


The results of the Weinstein investigation were devastating to the university and its image.


Sadly, but predictably, some carolina haters engaged in schadenfreude of the worst kind. Tired of what they perceived as a holier-than-thou attitude at unc, they took great delight in carolina's fall from grace. They demanded that titles be vacated, victories forfeited and monies returned. They felt the NCAA should impose Draconian sanctions against unc that were every bit as tough as the ones levied against Penn State following the Jerry Sandusky child-abuse scandal.


They may get their wishes. Academic fraud of the kind that existed at carolina goes to the heart of an institution's mission and integrity. It is just about the worst scandal of its kind in NCAA history. And the fact that it happened in Chapel Hill hurts more than just the university and its athletics programs. It hurts everyone in college athletics who is fighting against corruption at all levels. This was a massive blow to everyone who believes, however naively, in the concept of the level playing field.


But unc took this distasteful reality to a new level.


As academic watchdog Gerald Gurney told CNN, "I can safely say that the scope of the 20-year unc fraud scandal easily takes the prize for the largest and most nefarious scandal in the history of NCAA enforcement. The depth and breadth of the scheme -- involving counselors, coaches, academic and athletic administrators, faculty, etc. -- eclipses any previous scandal."

UNC-CHeat
 
Deadspin....



unc Athletes Were Steered To School's Sports Ethics Professor


The report on academic fraud in unc athletics focused mainly on the prevalence of so-called "paper courses"-one-on-one independent study classes requiring minimal work for inflated grades to keep players eligible. The school's student newspaper has examined additional documents, and finds a larger-than-reported role in the scandal was played by unc's resident sports ethics scholar.


The Daily Tar Heel has more details on professor Jan Boxill, who teaches Ethics in Sports in the school's philosophy department, and who, until last month, served as director of unc's ethics center. Boxill made a few appearances in the Wainstein report, mostly working closely with athletic programs to push students into sham classes in the maligned African and Afro-American studies department. One exchange with an AFAM administrator concerned a women's basketball player:


According to the document, Crowder emailed Boxill asking, "Did you say a D will do for (the basketball player)?" Boxill emailed back, "Yes a D will be fine; that's all she needs."


As there was no smoking gun in the Wainstein report, Boxill continues to teach her sports ethics class-though she was removed as director of unc's Parr Center for Ethics within a week of the release of the investigation's findings. But the Daily Tar Heel has gone beyond the report, to a collection of documents released as supplemental material. It contains emails to, from, and about Boxill that strongly hint at deeper involvement in unc's "paper courses," and reveals that Boxill offered an absurd 160 of her own independent study courses in eight years.


In a 2006 email to Deborah Crowder, the secretary in the African and Afro-American studies department who Wainstein showed was largely responsible for the creation of the paper courses, football counselor Cynthia Reynolds discussed registering her players for new classes.


"Nice call on the Phil 30 (Boxill) correspondence course last semester," the email said. "Didn't know Jan was doing those."


In emails from later that year, Reynolds asked Boxill to take on a student for an independent study on sports ethics.


In another case, women's soccer counselor Brent Blanton referred a student to Boxill who was looking for an independent study. In an email to Blanton, the student said she didn't care if the course was "basket weaving."


Men's basketball tutor Janet Huffstelter emailed Boxill in 2007, asking her for advice on an upcoming quiz in philosophy.


"(Redacted) had a tough week," Huffstelter said. "I'm sorry he waited until the last minute to call me in for help. I guess it's not unusual, though."


Boxill responded with at least six specific questions that could be on the quiz, according to the emails.


Almost all of Boxill's emails that were released were either her talking about, or to, students. "I will do whatever I can to help you obtain your degree," she said in one email.


In another: "Just talked with Betsy Taylor in Steele Bldg, and she said she is making you a candidate for May, and that we are correct-all you need to do to is to PHIL with an A-!! And THAT will be done!!! This so great."


One student emailed Boxill, asking why she hadn't heard from Boxill about the independent study course in a few weeks. Another student was looking for a way to get six hours to keep his or her Pell Grant, and Boxill suggested six hours of a philosophy or African and Afro-American independent study.


Another student asked for an extension on a paper, and Boxill replied: "I have to say this is getting ridiculous! You have had the entire term to do *VERY MINIMAL* work."


Again, there is no hard proof of wrongdoing on Boxill's part here, nor any evidence that the independent study courses she oversaw were deficient.


But it's notable that investigators never probed the content of Boxill's courses, and that the Wainstein report never even mentioned that athletes were steered to her classes when they needed high grades. The report itself portrayed an AFAM department gone rogue, operating outside the awareness of unc's top administrators, the scandal confined to a few maverick faculty members. But the actual documents suggest that the problems were more widespread. Those documents, for whatever reason, weren't deemed fit to go into the report.

UNC-CHeat
 
Some contradictory statements. States that "the initial motivation for this widespread fraud was to ensure the eligibility of unc athletes" then says "what happened at unc is an academic scandal through and through." WTF? It was both. Nice shot at SACS though , "obviously the accreditors here proved particularly useless."
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unc scandal isn't about athletics - it's about empty degrees


While for years the university maintained that only the department chair of the African-American studies program, Julius Nyang'oro, understood what was going on, it is clear from this new report that coaches and athletic tutors were fully aware. After all they were funneling their students into the classes in order to boost their GPAs.


Administrators knew, too. According to the report, one administrator "became aware in 2005 or 2006 that Nyang'oro was routinely listed as the instructor-of-record for a number of independent studies - approximately 300 per year. Three-hundred? "That administrator's response was just to ask Nyang'oro to reduce his independent studies numbers and then to let the matter drop." As a result these completely fraudulent courses went on for another five years.


The initial motivation for this widespread fraud was to ensure the eligibility of unc athletes - Nyang'oro's assistant was a big unc sports fan! But the problem was systemic. unc was regularly admitting kids who could not do college-level work. According to one researcher, who looked at the reading abilities of 183 unc-Chapel Hill basketball and football players, 60% read between fourth- and eighth-grade levels. Between 8% and 10% read below a third-grade level. Obviously these athletes could not be enrolled in regular college classes, so they were steered into particular departments - communications, exercise studies and African-American studies - that would offer an easier ride.


What happened at unc is an academic scandal through and through.


Moreover, Shaw wonders whether the fact that it was a minority studies department on a campus that is unusually focused on "multiculturalism" meant that it got a free pass. No one wants to be the politically incorrect professor calling attention to the problem.


Anne Neal of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni points out that obviously the accreditors here proved particularly useless. How did they not notice what was going on for almost two decades?


unc, she says, "is an example of an institution that has lost its way and really seems to put reputation and revenues ahead of academic mission."


Neal compares it to the situation at Penn State a couple of years ago, but notes that the problem is far broader than just the way that athletics has corrupted higher education.

UNC-CHeat
 
unx alum Bob Lee...



Yesterday BobLee unloaded on unc "Fat Cats" who amidst The Great Unpleasantness are occupying themselves by Rearranging the deck chairs on The Titanic. It has been suggested that I share my aired comments with you my valued cyber-audience.


BobLee's 60-Second Shout-Out.... WCHL's Good Sports 11/15/14:


I'm going to assume that everyone listening to us this morning is aware that the University of North carolina is operating under a cloud of considerable duress.


The most distressing duress that has ever enveloped this university, its athletics department, the community of Chapel Hill, and the hearts and minds of almost every alumnus and fan of carolina.


I say ALMOST. Apparently one particular group of alumni/fans - those so-called "Fat Cats" have decided to concern itself with what might best be called - Rearranging the deck chairs on The Titanic.


These deep-pocketed Tar Heel partisans - titans of industry and commerce one and all - felt compelled to formally notify Bubba The Real AD that they are quite concerned about one particular issue.


The Issue That Warranted Their Concern is NOT The Crowder Nyang'oro Scheme nor any of the related issues brought to light by The Martin Report, The Wainstein Report, or any issue ever mentioned in any article ever written by Dan Kane. Nope. None of those silly trivialities are first and foremost in the minds of these unc Fats Cats. Noooo.....


They, rather, are concerned about the non-traditional color combinations of Tar Heel Football UNIFORMS. Let me use my best Allan Iverson "Practice" voice. These Aged Frat Boys In Eternal Pursuit of Braggin' Rights are worried about UNIFORMS ..... UNIFORMS.


Amid this Historic Tumult in which this University community is dog-paddling to stay afloat, these privileged powerbrokers are insisting that Bubba Cunningham and Larry Fedora reorder their current priorities. Bubba and Larry are, they contend, "inflicting irreparable damage to the brand of Tar Heel Football" by tinkering with Kenan fashion tradition.


Try reading that last sentence without giggling.... or saying "Oh My!"

If Marvin Austin had never tweeted four years ago. If all the subsequent dominos had not collapsed to where This Vain Glorious Proud University is now a National Punchline and likely facing significant punitive actions for its assorted sins of omission and commissions. The color of our Football uniforms MIGHT indeed be an interesting tailgate discussion.



NOW is NOT the time to be hot & bothered about freakin' UNIFORMS. But wait a minute.


Maybe Such Misdirected Priorities is how we got into this Gloriously Unpleasant Mess to begin with. Ya think?

This post was edited on 11/16 12:42 PM by DevilDJ

UNC-CHeat
 
pointwolf
A wise man, indeed
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Posted: Today 9:33 AM


Re: SACS letter- uncch scandal -Boxill offered 160 inde-stdy


Polite company stops (18 years) without exposing Dean. What you are now seeing is only the "trailer". Wait until the real movie gets released.


popcorn futures are so high that ethanol will be removed from gasoline. Sit back, turn off your cell phones and enjoy the movie.
 
Let's start with the ongoing scandal that is the University of North carolina. unc has been in the headlines of late because of charges it was letting its "student athletes" get credits they really hadn't earned.


First the university resisted the charges - publicly questioning the integrity of the accusers.


Now Chapel Hill has admitted that for 18 years, more than 3,100 students took what were essentially phony classes, and half of those who took them were student athletes.


It is a shocking disservice, because while it may help the basketball program, it leaves the players who effectively worked for the school without the real college degree they had been promised.


That's the gist of a class-action lawsuit filed by former unc linebacker Michael McAdoo. McAdoo argues that he and fellow former unc athletes were promised a quality education by coaches, only to be steered "into a 'shadow curriculum' of bogus courses which never met and which were designed for the sole purpose of providing enrollees high grades."


It's going to be hard for unc to argue with that.

UNC-CHeat
 
More on Strohm's departure...



unc's General Counsel Leslie Strohm to leave for Louisville


But those who have been on the other side of a University lawsuit say her office is reluctant to make policy changes.


Mary Willingham, the former athletic learning specialist suing the University for creating a hostile working environment, said Strohm's office fails students by not protecting their academic integrity.


"It's pretty clear now that the general counsel was a part of the cover-up (of the athletic scandal)," Willingham said, saying Strohm's office first investigated unc's athletic-academic scandal, but did not unearth the biggest pieces of information that were brought forward in the Wainstein report.


"I voiced my concern (in 2013) that we still weren't getting to the truth with our academics and athletics. They should have uncovered the truth. The truth is in the transcripts - it's that simple."


Andrea Pino, who filed a federal complaint against the University for its handling of her sexual assault case with four others in 2013, said Strohm's office initially resisted changing the University's sexual assault policy.


"We knew that when it would get to Leslie's office it wouldn't move from there," Pino said. "Until the complaint was filed, there was never any talk of policy changes - it was set in stone."


Pino said Strohm's office viewed her complaint as an attack on the University, not a way to better the campus.


"It did become an 'us versus them' scenario," she said.


Strohm said her office advises clients on more than 300 matters each week.


"I have been working more than 30 years, and this is the finest team of legal professionals - and people - I have ever known," Strohm said. "I am immensely proud of the Office of University Counsel and all the work that we do."

UNC-CHeat
 
unc SEEKS TO MOVE MARY WILLINGHAM CASE TO FEDERAL COURT


At a hearing Monday, a judge heard arguments on whether Mary Willingham's case against unc Chapel Hill and some of its leaders should be moved from a district court in Wake County to federal court.


The former learning specialist who questioned the literacy level of athletes at the University of North carolina at Chapel Hill and said the school had committed academic misconduct amended a civil lawsuit filed against the school last week.


The amended lawsuit names unc Chancellor Carol Folt, Provost Jim Dean and ex-Senior Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education Bobbi Owen. The lawsuit also names the unc system as a defendant.


The case was originally filed in Wake County District Court, but unc argued that Willingham's claims fall under federal law. unc is asking a judge to move the case from the Eastern District to the Middle District for the sake of convenience and other factors. Willingham did not attend Monday's hearing. Both her attorney and unc declined to comment after the hearing. A ruling could come at any time.


In the lawsuit, Willingham said she was demoted and the school retaliated against her after she raised concerns such as low reading levels for athletes and the existence of "paper classes" requiring only one research paper at semester's end. She said those classes helped keep athletes eligible.


Willingham seeks reinstatement and damages of at least $10,000.


Willingham first became a household name about two years ago when, in published CNN reports, she claimed some student-athletes she worked with could not read and write at anything close to a college level.


In her lawsuit, Willingham claims she was ostracized, harassed, demoted, and reassigned for whistleblowing. She later resigned.


In CNN's initial stories, Willingham said her research showed that between 8 and 10 percent of unc basketball and football players were reading at below a third-grade level.


unc later responded, saying it had commissioned independent experts to review Willingham's work and found flaws in her claims.


Since the suit was first filed, unc released a report by former federal prosecutor Kenneth Wainstein on his investigation of alleged academic fraud involving student athletes at the university.


The report covered various academic irregularities, including the so-called "paper classes" within the African-American [AFAM] studies department where students did not attend classes and turned in a paper for a grade at the end of the semester.


The report found the classes did exist for 18 years on campus and student athletes were steered into the classes by their academic advisors to keep them eligible to play.


Willingham has written a book with unc History Professor Jay Smith titled "Cheated: The unc Scandal, the Education of Athletes, and the Future of Big-Time College Sports." It is due out in March.

UNC-CHeat
 
Good Lord. Some funny stuff here. Seannie Bag-o-Donuts defends the corruption. "Nine years to graduate?!" "I don't feel like it's an athletic issue." WTF?! No questions about how many IS classes he took or why he didn't show his transcript though....

UNC-CHeat
 
PROJECT ON FAIR REPRESENTATION ANNOUNCES LAWSUITS CHALLENGING ADMISSIONS POLICIES AT HARVARD UNIV. AND UNIV. OF NORTH CAROLINA-CHAPEL HILL


The unc-Chapel Hill lawsuit alleges that, like Harvard, the University is not in compliance with the new Fisher strict scrutiny requirements. Students for Fair Admissions explains in its complaint that unc has admitted in an amicus brief it submitted to the Supreme Court in the Fisher case that the school can maintain, and actually increase, racial diversity through race-neutral means if it ends its race-based affirmative action policies. Students for Fair Admissions argues that this compels the university to end its racial classifications and preferences and adopt some combination of race-neutral policies instead.


Blum concluded, "The University of North carolina at Chapel Hill has no need to continue to use racial and ethnic preferences and should end them now instead of facing years of expensive and polarizing litigation."


B2qOaZpIAAAIYkp.jpg
 
Disgusting. But he's "DookieV" , right? My azz...


Dick Vitale‏@DickieV



Academic scandal @ unc ugly but hoopsters will put smiles on the faces of Tar Heel fans-team has depth + improved play from Meeks/Johnson


Except for one hole yay-hoo , the vast majority of the comments are spot-on...
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UNC-CHeat
 
From the ABC11 link...

unc is asking a judge to move the case from the Eastern District to the Middle District for the sake of convenience and other factors.

NEW LINK...

William Lindsay Osteen, Jr. is an Article III federal judge for the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina.

Born in Greensboro, North Carolina, Osteen received his bachelor's degree in 1983 and his Juris Doctor degree in 1987, both from the University of North Carolina.


"Other Factors"
 
unc-CH should weigh giving up 2005 basketball title before NCAA decides


The academic dishonesty at unc-Chapel Hill has been exposed, but the university has not been punished. When it comes, the penalty could be unthinkable for carolina basketball fans: losing a national championship.


Most of the attention on no-show, paper classes has landed on the football program. But other than some minor bowl games, the Tar Heel football team never won anything while the 18-year scandal was running its course - no Atlantic Coast Conference titles, let along a national championship.


Basketball is different. North carolina basketball is an elite program, frequently a national contender and occasionally the best. It captured titles in 1957, 1982, 1993, 2005 and 2009.


The 2005 team has fallen under increased scrutiny since last month's release of an investigative report by former Justice Department official Kenneth Wainstein. Supporting documents examined by The News & Observer showed 35 enrollments by basketball team members in paper classes during the 2004-2005 academic year. Individual players are not identified, although Rashad McCants reportedly took four such classes during the 2005 spring semester and made an A-minus in each.


The classes were offered by the African and Afro-American Studies Department. Administrator Deborah Crowder, who was not a faculty member, admitted to Wainstein that she graded students' papers, usually without reading them.


Winning a championship with only one player whose academic qualifications were suspect is a problem; if four or five were taking bogus classes while they were driving to a championship, questions are raised about the legitimacy of the accomplishment. Participants in National Collegiate Athletic Association events are supposed to be bonafide college students. If some were less than that, everyone wasn't competing on a level field.


While the NCAA continues an investigation into academic integrity issues, Chancellor Carol Folt has a choice. She can wait for the NCAA to decide appropriate penalties, or she can take steps herself to set things right.


Folt came to North carolina last year from Dartmouth College, an Ivy League institution with strong academics and relatively small-time athletics. The idea of an athlete competing without attending class must be foreign to her experience.


unc is correcting its academic leniency, which was mostly the product of a few unscrupulous individuals. Unfortunately, the university may have gained by fraud. Will it seek to keep its gains?


Part of the calculation may be the likelihood that the NCAA will strip unc of its 2005 title. If that's probable, the university would be better off to give it up first, admitting it was unfairly won. That would show a true desire to correct past mistakes.


Folt knows which athletes were enrolled in classes they didn't attend and received grades they didn't earn. She knows whether punishment is deserved. She knows the cost of winning and what's too high a price for a university that once stood for integrity and must do so again.

UNC-CHeat
 
Agent Pierce aka Bob Lee...



unc's Mess and The Beige Plate Theory


But that unc Trainwreck is starting to seep over into Real World Issues. YIKES!


Could my "Beige Plate" Theory be The Key to untying unc's Gordian Knot?


BobLee really likes Mary Willingham and unc Faculty Dissident Jay Smith. BobLee doesn't like all that many people. For Mary & Jay to pass his muster tells me a lot.


What Mary actually "blew her whistle" about has been ALLCAPPED to smithereens by the pin-headed nimrods who want to portray her, very incorrectly, as a jock-hating threat to Tar Heel Sports.... and to their all-important Braggin' Rights. That could not be further from The Truth. There's that nasty T-word again.


Mary's contention was: OK, unc had admitted these boys who simply cannot read or write at anywhere near a college freshman level. They are here. What do we do with them? Either (1) Hide them in a silly zero-nutrition "eligibility curriculum" OR (2) Design a remedial curriculum to do what we can to compensate for the sub-standard education they were processed thru before they got here..... The two-four years these kids might be at unc will likely be the last contact they ever have with any educational system. We (uncCH) are their last hope.


For that humane concern Mary Willingham lost her job at unc and became "Typhoid Mary" to a large group of pin-headed nitwits. Now those same nitwits are claiming it is "their (the semi-literate boys) own fault" for being unable to do basic college-level classwork or to control their academic futures..


A University is not a Hotel. A young man processed thru a public education assembly line run by a "move'em thru the system" mindset is not going to arrive at The Old Well ready to "drink deep from The Perian Spring". The Perian WHAT?


If his learning lamp was not lit, re-lit, and regularly kindled during K-12, what are the chances it will suddenly ignite at age 18. Especially if one and all readily admit his #1 interest is excelling at Football or Basketball. He does understand where THAT enticing path "might lead". That dominates his thinking.


He simply lacks the intellectual wherewithal to "take responsibility for" taking advantages of all that a large university affords him. Any more than his mother (or father if he was really lucky) knew to ask for "green leafy vegetables" in that cafeteria line.


Those who are bloviating that "it's their own fault" are exhibiting the grossest form of ignorance, naïveté and academic racism. That many of these bloviators are academicians of the liberal ideological persuasion is not at all surprising. unc - another self-anointed paragon of diversity and compassion EXPOSED! Geeee, if I had a nickel for every time thats happened.


Academic career counseling (wink, wink) for "that certain type" of student-athlete is the simple questions of - (1) what courses can you get passing grades in (aka "stay eligible to play"), that (2) do not interfere with your Football /Basketball duties.


The odds of that "certain type" of student-athlete getting to the end of the academic cafeteria line with a very very Beige Plate are extraordinarily high.


But who cares so long as WhattsaMattaU beats its hated rivals..... Right?

UNC-CHeat
 
Recent comment from previously linked Bob Lee article...



SG[/I]


This whole mess really is no where near over is it?
_____________




BL:


No, not in my opinion. I think the worst is yet to come and I don't mean just the NCAA sanctions.

UNC-CHeat
 
Editorial: Uneasy silence


The KU chancellor's silence on the North carolina academic scandal only heightens concerns.


J-W Editorial Staff
Posted Wednesday, November 19, 2014


People who care about Kansas University are legitimately concerned about the academic scandal involving the University of North carolina basketball team.


After all, nine years covered by the unc academic investigation came during the tenure of former KU basketball coach Roy Williams and Wayne Walden, the basketball academic counselor who followed Williams from KU to unc. Also, the investigation confirmed 18 years of academic fraud at unc, including 10 years when KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little was serving as a top academic officer at unc.


It's no wonder KU friends and alumni have some questions and concerns about whether the KU basketball program also could get caught up in the unc scandal - and Gray-Little's refusal to address the situation does little to calm those concerns.


In February, soon after news broke about unc basketball players receiving grades for fake classes in the Department of African and Afro-American Studies, Gray-Little issued a statement saying that, if she had known about the problems at unc, she "would have taken action to address them." Since that time she has refused to comment on the situation at unc. Nor has she commented on any steps she might have taken to make sure KU athletic programs were in the clear regarding academics both before and since she arrived on campus in 2009.


Maybe KU has nothing to fear. Maybe everything on the academic front was on the up and up when Williams and Walden were at KU and after they left. But coaches or academic officials denying that they knew anything about a situation that arguably should have at least raised their suspicions isn't very comforting. Being able to deny you knew anything about an unpleasant situation doesn't mean it didn't happen - or that you shouldn't have known it was happening at the time.


This is a situation that cries out for involvement by the Kansas Board of Regents, whose members also have been unwilling to comment on the issue. Are the regents demanding more answers from Gray-Little than she is willing to give to the public? What are the regents doing to ensure that all state universities are free of the kind of academic scandal that has erupted at unc? These are questions that need to be answered.


This is an instance where the silence of KU's chancellor and the Board of Regents isn't golden - it only raises concerns and suspicions about what the public isn't being told.

UNC-CHeat
 
unc_Cheats_2005_Real_Winners.gif


IMO , any talk of unx taking down their 2005 banner is a trial balloon. A PR move. We know this was/is an 18-year scandal involving multiple sports. If unx gets away with ONLY relinquishing the '05 men's basketball title , that's a HUGE win for them. '93 and '09 had the same issues. If one comes down , all three come down. And every game won in every sport indicted is wiped away too. An azzload of women's soccer titles , a men's soccer crown , ACC titles , CWS finishes...all of it. unx would sacrifice one title to save all the others but , again , if they're allowed to do that , it would be another scandal in and of itself.
 
Quiz: Which member of unc's academic scandal are you?


In the past few weeks/months/decades, unc has faced a lot of academic/athletic/alliterative scandal. We're sure you want to know how to move on, and so do we. We're still looking for the answer. But until we find it, enjoy this unhelpful quiz!


Which member of unc's academic scandal are you?


I was "Holden Thorpe" , btw...
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UNC-CHeat
 
Player Eligibility Above Academic Integrity? Ways to Avoid unc-Chapel Hill's Academic Scandal


An independent investigation of the African and Afro-American Studies (AFAM) Department at the University of North carolina at Chapel Hill suggests that this prestigious institution placed player eligibility above academic integrity for nearly 20 years. The report concludes that multiple actors, including department chairpersons, academic counselors, tutors, and members of the athletic department, colluded to enroll students and student-athletes in "paper classes," which were not supervised by a faculty member, entailed no class attendance and required only the submission of a single research paper. These classes were particularly attractive to unc's Academic Support Program for Student Athletes (ASPSA), a group funded by the university's athletic department and charged with assisting student-athletes to attain the requisite GPA to maintain NCAA player eligibility. With the help of a non-faculty member of the AFAM Department who served as the course instructor, more than 3,100 students at the university - many of them athletes - received one or more semesters of deficient educational instruction and were awarded high grades that often had little relationship to the quality of their work.


While unc now faces the specter of NCAA sanctions and grave reputational harm to both its academic and athletic programs, administrators at other institutions must be concerned with their own school's adherence to academic standards and expectations. The incentives and organizational dynamics that allowed unc's academic improprieties to continue for nearly two decades are not unique to the Tar Heels' campus and may very well plague other institutions. Indeed, the recent academic probe at the University of Notre Dame that resulted in the suspension - and in some instances, the ultimate dismissal - of several student-athletes on the football team further suggests that no institution is immune to academic dishonesty among students and faculty alike. The unc report by outside counsel provides insight into how administrators can develop and/or assess the proper controls to detect and deter this type of academic wrongdoing...

UNC-CHeat
 
Should unc apologize? What readers are saying


Last week we asked you in the paper and on editor Mark Schultz's Facebook page whether unc officials should apologize to academic fraud whistleblower Mary Willingham. Here is what some fo you said:


Ann Hamrick: Vehemently apologize. And request the same from Chancellor Folt and Provost Dean when they are "free" to do so regardless of who wins the lawsuit.


Steven Wade: Yes, unc should definitely publicly apologize to Ms. Willingham. This, as you should know, is not the first time unc has been caught-up in sports/academic scandals. This goes back to the 19-teens and 20s when sports was mushrooming at this campus and many felt sports was getting out of control and that unc was putting forth football players unqualified to play in games and has been going on ever since.


Terri Buckner: Absolutely not. She violated students' privacy and made unsubstantiated claims about the illiteracy of student athletes using an instrument not developed for that purpose. Provost Dean had outside specialists review her claims and those claims were refuted based on the evidence she presented. I honor the role of whistleblower, but she went too far with her claims by denigrating an entire class of students (athletes) with weak/non-existent evidence.


Jimmy Grant: Both Carol Folt and Jim Dean should apologize to Mary! They both made this ugly situation at unc worse by trying to discredit Mary and her message that was supported by her data. After reading Jim's comments in which he try to destroy Mary, I suggest he take some business courses and learn some leadership skills, then update his resume and start looking for a job at a smaller university. unc's recovery from this scandal will be more painful when the residing provost has destroyed his own credibility and displayed inferior leadership abilities. I'll hold my breathe waiting for the apology.


Carol Candler: Should unc apologize to Mary Willingham? Without doubt. When she raised red flags, why didn't those administration officials ask questions, want to know more about the concerns she raised or express concern themselves? Instead they berated her when they could have saved themselves and the university humiliation and large amounts of money. The athletic improprieties should have been investigated when Mary first brought the subject up. Why is there even a question "Should unc apologize?"


Jim Alexander: OMG yes. Quite frankly, I don't see why there should be any question about it. A wrong was done, at least an apology is in order.


Kate Dobbs Ariail: Yes, and then they should apologize for taking so long to apologize.


Suzanne Haff: As a secondary literacy specialist myself, I have always believed Mary because I have seen the same thing. She was very very brave. As one can clearly see, it would have been much easier for her to go along with the corruption for another 20 years. I believe she should be offered an apology and a contract for life should she want it. I also believe the players should also have the apology of their coaches. And their parents.


Rene Delavarre: Yes, for sure. To think, this scandal occurred as a result of the rich boosters dying to have a winning team, seemingly, at all costs. Let's remember, it's just an amateur sport, where it's how you play the game, not whether you win or lose. This is not the pros, or is it?

UNC-CHeat
 
Derek Rowles‏@DerekRowles


#BreakingNews - Federal judge DENIES request to move Mary Willingham #unc lawsuit to Middle District NC.


DevilDJ ‏@DevilDJ32


@DerekRowles @TGibbsABC11 Judge in Middle District is unc alum William Lindsay Osteen. #companyman #carolinaway

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UNC-CHeat
 
A Competitive Disadvantage


Speaking to the University of Michigan faculty senate last week, Mark Schlissel, the university's president, was candid in his assessment of the admissions process for athletes. "We admit students who aren't as qualified," he said. "And it's probably the kids that we admit that can't honestly, even with lots of help, do the amount of work and the quality of work it takes to make progression from year to year."


His comments -- made as the University of North carolina is still reeling from a high-profile academic scandal where athlete preparedness was a central issue -- were perhaps too candid for some.


But academically competitive universities with big-time sports programs like Michigan and unc may be precisely where the risk for this sort of compromise is greatest. And, like Schlissel said, it starts with admissions.


When a report released in October revealed just how extensive academic fraud had been at unc, Carol Folt, the university's chancellor, said that one of the reasons that it went undetected for nearly two decades was that many at the university simply assumed that unc employees were above such conduct.


There were, of course, signs of trouble at unc before the investigations began, and the university has promised to step up its administrative oversight over academic support programs. But fraud aside, unc has also long been in the practice of recruiting athletes with far lower test scores than non-athletes. According to numbers provided to The News and Observer in 2010, freshman football recruits had an average SAT score that was 300 to 400 points lower than that of the average freshman at unc for most of the previous decade.


"Cheating scandals such as the one at the University of North carolina are not limited to a few rogue universities," Allen Sack, a professor of sports management at the University of New Haven, writes in a forthcoming opinion piece for Inside Higher Ed. "On the contrary, violations of academic integrity are to be expected in a system that requires athletes to give so much time and attention to sports that an army of academic counselors is needed to keep athletes eligible."

UNC-CHeat
 
Miller: Discussing possible sanctions for unc in academic fraud scandal


Now that the Weinstein Report has revealed the true scope of the academic fraud perpetrated by the AFAM department, the athletic department and other university officials at unc, what level and type of punishment should the Tar Heels' scandal incur? The NCAA has the opportunity to reaffirm the academic primacy of its mission; how will they respond to the findings in the Wainstein Report and the results of their own investigation into the matter?


When considering any possible penalties, it is important to remember how the "paper class" scheme was devised and maintained, and who knew what and when. The Weinstein Report is very clear where and how the fraud originated: The idea was hatched by AFAM department secretary Debbie Crowder, who had an illegal, albeit noble, desire to help academically disadvantaged students, especially athletes, in any way she could.


Crowder's efforts were aided and abetted by department chair Julius Nyang'oro, who, despite his occasional moral qualms concerning his and his department's actions, either perpetuated the scheme or allowed individuals like Crowder free rein to change grades, forge signatures and ignore the quality of assignments in the course of the grading process.


The key takeaway here is that no athletic department personnel - whether administrators, coaches, advisors or tutors - went to Crowder, Nyang'oro or anyone else in the AFAM department to suggest the initiation of academic fraud. To be sure, these individuals knew about and appreciated the existence of the scheme and, when Crowder was set to retire, lobbied hard for its continuance, but never was it their intention to commit academic fraud at the outset. Athletic department personnel were simply taking advantage of a situation they knew could be to their short-term benefit.


Because of these circumstances, I believe it would be inappropriate to give unc the so-called "death penalty" - banning the football, basketball and other athletic teams from competition for a period of time. Even though the academic fraud seen at Chapel Hill is truly unprecedented, the fact that the athletic department wasn't at the heart of the improprieties leads me to believe that competition bans should not be imposed (despite the fact that some current Tar Heel athletes may have been, at one point, beneficiaries of the "paper classes").


It seems to me that more appropriate consequences from the NCAA should include, at the very least, vacating wins from the programs whose players remained academically eligible because of the "paper classes." Penalties of this variety would likely blot out unc's national championships in men's basketball in 2005 and 2009, forever tarnishing legendary coach Roy Williams' legacy at Chapel Hill.


Speaking of Williams, I believe he should remain personally unscathed in this situation, insofar as I don't believe it's a collegiate coach's responsibility to regulate or vet the classes his/her players are taking. Roy is a very prideful man, and the loss of past championships would more than rock his boat, especially when considering that he's still incredulous that his players were even involved in the fiasco.


In addition to vacating wins, I believe the NCAA should impose a two-season postseason ban on the men's basketball and football teams (and any other programs found to have significantly benefited from the AFAM department's academic fraud), as well as reduction in available scholarships for a period not to exceed two years.


Furthermore, the entire athletic department should be placed on NCAA-administered probation for the period of time equal to the length of time the "paper class" scheme was in place, namely somewhere in the vicinity of 15-20 years. Under the terms of this probation, the unc athletic department should be ordered to compile comprehensive academic information on all of its athletes and allow an independent auditor to compare this information with university-wide academic data to ensure no major discrepancies continue to exist. Finally, the NCAA should levy the maximum allowable monetary fines against unc; these consequences have to hurt in order to deter similar behavior in the future.


As much as I'm against penalizing the student-athletes of today for the past transgressions of student-athletes and athletic personnel, the unc athletic department cannot go unpunished for allowing its athletes to take advantage of an academic fraud scheme of unparalleled proportions.



Parting shot...
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The Weinstein report, which was authorized and paid for by unc, clearly constitutes an independent investigation, and could not have been possibly designed to reduce or minimize the involvement of important coaches and certain university officials in this scandal. To discuss the academic fraud scandal and Cameron's self-proscribed authority over the issue, or how proud coach Williams must be over this possible CYA national championship, e-mail Cameron at cmiller6 'at' stanford.edu.



I wonder what sanctions he'd suggest if he actually understood how , why and WHO started the scam? He's wrong , obviously , when assigning blame and cause. His sanctions? Decent as STARTERS but nowhere near comprehensive and/or punitive enough.

UNC-CHeat
 
Scapegoating "rogues" , shooting the messenger , saving banners , basketball and coaching legacies sure ain't as cheap as it used to be...
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Firm charges unc $1.65 million for PR on fraud scandal, other work[/B]


The amount of money unc is spending on outside public relations in the wake of the academic fraud scandal is crossing past $2 million.


A copy of the contract provided under a public records request shows Edelman will receive more than $1.65 million for public relations services over the period of a year, ending April 30, 2015. The contract is not specific as to what kinds of services the firm will provide, but unc officials confirmed last month that at least 14 employees from the firm worked on the public release of former U.S. Justice Department official Kenneth Wainstein's report on the scandal.


Wainstein's report confirmed that the scandal had its roots in keeping athletes eligible to play sports, particularly in the revenue sports of basketball and football. Nearly half of the 3,100 students who took the fraudulent classes in the long-running scheme were athletes.


unc had previously spent roughly $500,000 combined on two other firms and a public relations consultant.


Joel Curran, unc's vice chancellor of communications and public affairs, said Edelman's work goes beyond responding to the academic scandal. He said the firm, which bills itself as the world's largest, is also helping the university revamp its overall communications strategy.


Just like the other public relations work, Edelman's costs will not be covered with state funds or tuition dollars, unc officials say.

UNC-CHeat
 
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