Temple investigating attack on student

By Joe Brandt

Temple is investigating an attack on a student who was punched in the face yesterday and allegedly called anti-Semitic and religious slurs.

The student, managing and information systems major Daniel Vessal, told Truthrevolt.org that at the student activities fair Temple Fest, he spoke with members of Students for Justice in Palestine about the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

After the students discussed possible ends to the conflict, Vessal said some students called him a “baby killer” and not long after that “this kid just rocks me in the face as hard as he can,” Vessal told the site.

“My glasses flew off. After a two-second blur I had no clue what had happened. I couldn’t believe the kid actually hit me,” Vessal said.

Two of Vessal’s friends told Truthrevolt that while Vessal was on the ground, a student called him “kike,” a slur for people of Jewish heritage.

SJP released a statement on the incident yesterday, which contended that Vessal was slapped, not punched, after allegedly calling the group’s members “terrorists” and saying “I can’t believe this group exists.”

SJP also said the assailant was not a member of SJP but a friend of some of the members.

Additionally, the group said the incident was “unnecessary and deplorable, and does not represent the principles of our organization.” The group says no slurs were used in the incident.

Around 12:30 p.m. Thursday, Vice President for Student Affairs Theresa A. Powell emailed a statement to students, faculty and staff.

“In the coming days, we will work with students and local leaders—particularly those in our religious communities—to ensure that everyone understands and conforms to the principles of freedom valued in our nation and guaranteed by our Student Conduct Code,” Powell wrote. 

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

University investigating reported anti-Semitic assault on student

Temple said it is investigating a reported attack against a student on Main Campus Wednesday afternoon that allegedly included “physical violence, anti-Semitic statements and religious slurs.”

In a statement released Wednesday night, the university said officials have communicated with leaders of the Temple Jewish and pro-Palestinian communities in an effort to find a “best path for moving forward.”

In a letter sent to students on Thursday, Vice President for Student Affairs Theresa Powell condemned the attack.

“The university will not tolerate violence of any kind directed toward members of the Temple community,” Powell said in the letter.

Campus Safety Services is continuing to investigate the assault, and the university is asking anyone who witnessed the incident to contact Temple police at 215-204-1234.

Overridden fail-safe system a possible cause of Katz plane crash

By Joe Brandt

The plane crash that killed Temple trustee and Philadelphia Inquirer owner Lewis Katz on May 31 may have been caused by an override of the jet’s fail-safe system, according to the Inquirer.

The Inquirer obtained a copy of a letter dated Aug. 18 which Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. sent to pilots and owners of its jets.

The letter cautioned that Gulfstream fail-safe systems, which normally limit the plane to taxi speed while the gust lock is engaged, can be overridden if “proper [tail flap] unlock procedures are not followed.”

The movable tail and wing flaps are a crucial part of a plane’s takeoff, providing lift, but many planes have gust-lock systems to hold the flaps in place and protect them from potentially damaging wind while the plane is parked.

In June, investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board found through analysis of the  flight data recorder in Katz’s plane that no pre-flight control check was performed and that “[tail and wing flap] position during the taxi and takeoff was consistent with its position if the gust lock was engaged,” according to an NTSB report.

The Inquirer article, posted online August 20, quoted from Massachusetts Institute of Technology aeronautics and astronautics professor John Hansman Jr.

Hansman said the pilots should have turned off the gust-lock and then started the engines, but instead started the engines before disengaging the lock, overriding the fail-safe system and allowing the plane to reach greater speeds. The plane reached about 190 mph before it crashed.

Additionally, a professional pilot of Gulfstream jets, Steven M. Janos, told the Inquirer: “[m]y understanding is that if you start the engine, you will not be able to release the gust lock.”

Katz’s plane crashed and burst into flames at Hanscom Field near Boston, Mass. after he attended a fundraising event at the house of author and historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.

Four days earlier, he had won control of the Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News, and philly.com with fellow Temple trustee and business partner H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest.

The three passengers and three crew members on board died in the crash, along with Katz.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

CST adviser sues Temple for discrimination

An adviser from the College of Science and Technology filed a federal lawsuit against Temple yesterday, the Philadelphia Daily News reported. He says he was denied a promotion on the basis of his race.

Kenneth Ruff, who is African American, advises CST students with last names N through O. He also advises for TUTeach, a program for preparing high school math and science teachers.

According to the Daily News, Ruff said in the suit that he was the only African American among five advisers when the advising program was reorganized in 2010. CST’s website currently lists nine advisers.

The 2010 reorganization established a career ladder and new positions like Advisor I and II, Senior Advisor and Principal Advisor. Ruff’s applications for the latter two were denied. They were potential promotions in both salary and title, the Daily News reported.

According to the Daily News, Ruff’s suit said two people who are Caucasian with “significantly less experience” received the promotions.

One of the people promoted was an adviser for only four months, and the other previously served as an enrollment and retention coordinator.

A request for comment from Ruff was pending.

Additionally, Ruff’s suit quoted from a paper penned by an administrator who denied him the promotions. He presented the quotation as “evidence of [Temple’s] discriminatory intent.” Matthew Campbell, then-director of CST’s Office of Student Services, wrote the paper for his doctoral program.

According to the suit, Campbell wrote “I sense that I am always limited by my identity as a white, middle-class male of protestant background. . . . I’m still suspect of my own intentions, aware of my subconscious desire for self-preservation/promotion and the [white] privilege granted to me unwittingly.”

Campbell now serves as Vice President for Learning and Student Success at Pierce College in Puyallup, Washington. A request for comment was pending.

Ruff wrote in the suit that he obtained a “notice of right to sue” from the federal government’s Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. He filed the suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Temple spokesman Ray Betzner said in a statement: “Mr. Ruff, who continues to be employed at Temple, bases his complaint on claims that are roughly four years old. The EEOC has already reviewed his case and closed it after finding no evidence of any violation of law.”

            Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Police looking for suspects involved in robbery at 18th and Jefferson streets

The Philadelphia police are looking for suspects connected to a robbery of a 23-year-old female on the 1500 block of 18th street near Jefferson.

The incident happened on July 27 where a surveillance video released by police shows a woman attempting to get into her home when she was approached by three males. The suspects punched her in the face multiple times and attempted to take her iPhone but fled toward Cecil B. Moore Avenue when they were unable to.

The first suspect is between 18-21, 5’5”-5’8”, of thin build, has dread locks as well as neck and arm tattoos. The second suspect is between 18-21, between 5’5”-5’8”, of thin build and has a “Caesar haircut.” The third is between 18-21 and wore a blue Nike shirt.

The female was taken to Temple University Hospital.

Anyone with tips or information is asked to call 215-686-8477.

Theobald’s salary far below other presidents’, study says

By Paul Klein

President Theobald's makes more than $100,000 less than the median public university president's salary. | TTN FILE PHOTO

President Theobald’s makes more than $100,000 less than the median public university president. | TTN FILE PHOTO

President Theobald has a salary well below many other public university leaders, ranking No. 173 among all public college executives, according to a Chronicle of Higher Education survey published earlier this summer.

With total compensation at $352,021 in the 2013 fiscal year, Theobald made nearly $127,000 less than the middle of the pack. However, in the current fiscal year, Theobald will receive a significant bump in salary.

Slated to earn $450,000 this fiscal year and an additional $200,000 in deferred compensation as part of his contract, Theobald would move up 67 spots in the rankings, assuming no other salaries change.

A university spokesman said Theobald is also provided with a residence for personal and university use with an additional car and driver for university business.

The Chronicle’s survey, published May 16, ranked the salaries of 255 chief executives at 227 public universities or systems nationwide. In Pennsylvania, Theobald’s compensation was also below average.

University of Pittsburgh’s outgoing chancellor, Mark Nordenberg, made nearly $300,000 more than Theobald and was ranked the 43rd highest. Nordenberg, who will retire Aug. 1, served Pittsburgh for more than 36 years, 19 of which he was chancellor.

The second highest Pennsylvania public university president was Pennsylvania State University’s Rodney Erickson who received $618,220 and was ranked 42nd. Erickson, who retired last month, assumed the position in late 2011 after president Graham Spanier was ousted in the heat of the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal.

With the exception of head executives who served for less than a whole fiscal year, like Temple’s former interim president Richard Englert, Theobald’s compensation only trumped Michael Driscoll of Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Theobald earned nearly $25,000 more than Driscoll.

Not one active Pennsylvania state college executive was in the Top 10 or even the Top 20. However, next fiscal year will be a different story for Pennsylvania’s state higher education leaders.

Pittsburgh’s new chancellor Patrick Gallagher will be receiving a base salary of $525,000. Penn State’s new president Eric Barron will make $800,000 with $200,000 in transitional payment.

Paul Klein can be reached at tua80386@temple.edu.