News in brief: 2.17 Issue

NBC SUSPENDS BRIAN WILLIAMS

Longtime NBC anchor and reporter Brian Williams has been suspended for six months without pay for his actions concerning false reports about his role in a helicopter during the Iraq War in 2003, the New York Times reported.

Williams, the managing editor for “NBC Nightly News,” received the Lew Klein Excellence in the Media Award from Temple in September for his success in the field of journalism. Throughout a Q&A session with Temple students at Tomlinson Theater, Williams talked about various experiences during his career, including his time reporting in Iraq in 2003.

While students in attendance expressed approval in what Williams had accomplished in his career, Temple journalism professor Christopher Harper told the Inquirer last week that NBC was at fault for Williams’ mistake.

 “NBC has not monitored the crossover between Brian Williams as news anchor and Brian Williams as entertainer,” Harper told the Inquirer. “NBC is in the crosshairs because it has made more mistakes than CBS, ABC, or CNN.”

An investigation into Williams’ reporting is ongoing.

-Steve Bohnel

KHALILI RECEIVES NIDA GRANT

A five-year, $7.4 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse will allow researchers from Temple’s School of Medicine to examine how HIV-1 and cocaine interact to cause brain impairment, according to a university press release.

The leader of the study will be Kamel Khalili, chair of the Department of Neuroscience and director of Temple’s Comprehensive NeuroAIDS Center. He said he’s been interested in how HIV impacts the body since it was first discovered.

“I have been interested in the central-nervous-system impact of HIV-1 since the very first days of the disease,” Khalili said in the release. “We realized that the impact is not as simple as the virus directly infecting neuronal cells, but rather a series of highly complicated events that lead to neuronal injury and death and ultimately dysregulated brain function.”

Last July, The Temple News reported that Khalili had led and successfully achieved an effort in developing a technology that destroys the HIV-1 virus from human cells in a laboratory – the first time such an accomplishment had ever occurred.

Past research conducted in Khalili’s lab suggests that cocaine causes the virus to disrupt neuronal cell function and even kill neuronal cells. He said that although the grant was given to his team to specifically focus on damage to the central nervous system caused by HIV-1, the research could lead to more treatment options for those with neurocognitive disorders.

“This area of AIDS research is very novel, and we are just scratching the surface in terms of scientific information and knowledge,” Khalili said. “Through this grant, we hope to answer several important questions that could help in the next phase for the development of therapeutic molecules.”

-Steve Bohnel

DNC WILL COME TO CITY IN 2016

The Inquirer reported Friday that the 2016 Democratic National Convention will be hosted in Philadelphia in July of that year. The city’s bid beat contenders Brooklyn, New York and Columbus, Ohio.

Mayor Nutter said Philadelphia will be on a global stage when the convention rolls around next year.

“This was a rigorous, grueling, and appropriate process for the kind of decision the DNC had to make,” Mayor Nutter said following the announcement last Thursday. “This is a very serious matter. The world watches what happens in American politics.”

Former Gov. Ed Rendell told the Inquirer that U.S. Rep. Bob Brady, chairman of the Philadelphia Democratic Party, was key in helping the Democratic National Committee make its decision.

Rendell said the projected cost of the convention would be $84 million, according to Philadelphia 2016, the nonprofit organization that is coordinating funding for the event.

He added that nearly $5 million has been raised, and the organization has another $12 million in pledges.

Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey told the Inquirer that hosting the DNC and Pope Francis – who will visit Philadelphia in September as part of the World Meeting of Families – within a 10-month span won’t require specific security measures.

“They’re different, but crowds are crowds,” Ramsey said. “You learn every time you handle a large event, whether it’s the pope or the DNC. You get better at handling it. And we’re pretty damn good at handling these things.”

-Steve Bohnel

WASHINGTON BILL WOULD CHANGE STATUS OF ADJUNCTS

A Washington State Senate bill would accredit adjunct faculty members at colleges as public school substitute teachers, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.

State Sen. Christine Rolfes, a sponsor of the bill, wrote that “there are hundreds of highly qualified part-time college instructors with degrees in math, science, English, history, and the arts who would step in and help if their qualifications were better recognized and the process streamlined.”

The bill was drafted in response to the widespread shortage of substitute teachers in the state of Washington. Rolfes and other sponsors of the bill argue that it is “absurd” for the state to require college instructors to obtain formal teacher training to qualify as public school substitutes.

Rolfes told the Chronicle that “a lot of work” still needs to be done to the bill, which is scheduled for its first Senate-committee hearing next week.

-Allan Barnes

No agreement met for election in adjunct unionization

A conference call scheduled on Feb. 10 to discuss an election for adjunct unionization was canceled after university officials “raised technical and legal objections,” said Art Hochner, president of the Temple Association of University professionals.

Adjuncts filed for authorization cards in mid-December with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board to unionize for TAUP, which represents about 1,400 full-time faculty members, not including those who instruct in the health professional buildings.

“[The university doesn’t] seem to want the adjuncts to unionize,” Hochner said. “This is simply about giving adjuncts the chance to vote. Temple doesn’t have to do anything but let them have their self-determination.”

The next step for unionization is a hearing scheduled on March 19 with the PLRB in Harrisburg where the university, adjunct and adjunct representatives can discuss differences to hopefully reach an agreement on an election date.

Until then, a rally and vigil “in support of a collective bargaining election for adjunct faculty” will be held at 11 a.m. on Feb. 23 at the corner of Broad Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue.

Hochner said the event is being held to “get Temple’s attention so maybe they’ll change their mind.”

Sharon Boyle, associate vice president for Human Resources operations, could not be reached for immediate comment.

State trooper charged in shooting of Temple grad and colleague

A state trooper was charged with five counts of reckless endangerment on Tuesday for his fatal shooting of a colleague who was a Temple and Roman Catholic high school graduate, the Inquirer reported.

Corporal Richard Schroeter, who was training five new state troopers at the Public Safety Training Campus on Sept. 30, was explaining trigger mechanics when he pulled the trigger of his duty-issued firearm. The shot struck Officer David Kedra in the abdomen.

Kedra’s older brother, Kevin, said Tuesday that the family is unsatisfied with the charges and is arranging a statement to be released to the media and governor.

The shooting occurred three weeks after Eric Frein had fatally shot one trooper and seriously injured another in Pike County. By Sept. 30, hundreds of officers were searching the Poconos for Frein.

After the investigation of Schroeter’s case – which spanned several months following Kedra’s shooting – a grand jury in Norristown concluded there was only probable cause to charge Schroeter with reckless endangerment, who also faced possible charges of homicide and involuntary manslaughter.

Schroeter is facing a maximum of 5 to 10 years in prison if he is convicted of all five reckless endangerment charges. He waived his preliminary hearing, and bail was set at $50,000.
Steve Bohnel can be reached at steve.bohnel@temple.edu or on Twitter @Steve_Bohnel.

News in brief: 2.10 issue

ENDOWED CHAIR NAMED FOR DIAZ

A $450,000 donation was made to Temple’s Beasley School of Law, the university announced in a press release on Thursday.

Exelon, a local energy company, gave the gift under the name of Nelson Diaz, who graduated from Temple in 1972 and is on the corporation’s board of directors.

Diaz, who also is a member of Temple’s Board of Trustees, said in an interview with The Temple News that he has raised an additional $250,000, bringing the total amount donated to $700,000. The money is being raised to help create an endowed chair in civil rights that would be named after Diaz, the release said.

The chair would also seek to help Latino students at Temple, Diaz said.

“Essentially, it’s trying to bring to bear the contributions of many in the civil rights movement, including a lot of Latinos who have contributed to that and bring professors around the country on a semester basis and also to provide some assistance and scholarships for Latino students,” he told The Temple News.

Temple trustee Daniel H. Polett will help Diaz in raising the remaining money for the chair, which would be named the “Judge Nelson A. Diaz Chair for Civil Rights,” according to the release. $550,000 is still needed in order to establish the chair.

“My life has been dedicated to making a difference,” Diaz said in the release. “I want this gift to continue in that long tradition, and I thank Exelon for being a part of that commitment.”

-Steve Bohnel and Christian Matozzo

GROWTH RATE DECREASE FOR PART-TIME INSTRUCTORS

Due to an increasing amount of full-time non-tenure track professors, the growth rate of the number of part-time instructors in universities and colleges has decreased, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.

New synthesis of federal data obtained by the Chronicle shows that doctoral institutions are the only universities where growth in the number of part-time instructors has remained constant, along with an increase in full-time professors not on a tenure track.

According to the study, which spanned from 2005-13, “our largest and most prestigious universities are the ones that are most culpable in the employment trends that are upending the tenure system and spreading low-wage labor as a routine means of educating undergraduates.”

Steven J. Shulman, a professor of economics at Colorado State University at Fort Collins and research director at its Center for the Study of Academic Labor, conducted a study in response to the federal data, which stated that “the tenure system … seems likely to continue to weaken faculty and graduate student employment at U.S. colleges and universities.”

Kiernan R. Mathews, a director of the Collaborative on Academic Careers in Higher Education, at Harvard University, said a change in how the government counts full-time and part-time instructors – which occurred in 2011 – might have skewed the new federal data.

But Mathews added that there has been “an interest in consolidating teaching into more full-time, non-tenure-track positions,” because it provides stability to students and faculty and increases the amount of faculty who can contribute to non-instructional duties, like those linked to public service and shared governance at institutions.

-Steve Bohnel

Suspect arrested in robbery of a student

Temple Police have apprehended a suspect in connection with the robbery of a student on 18th and Berks streets around 2:45 a.m. Saturday.

Edward Randall, 19, of the 2400 block of Garnet street was arrested around 4:30 a.m. Saturday, Executive Director of Campus Security Charlie Leone said.

Leone said in an email that two males approached a student before one displayed a gun and took the student’s cell phone before fleeing west on Berks Street.

A TU Alert was sent out around 3:00 a.m. No injuries were reported.

Another TU Alert was sent out around 8:00 a.m., informing of Randall’s arrest, who was in possession of the student’s phone, Leone said.

Lian Parsons can be reached at lian.parsons@temple.edu or on Twitter @Lian_Parsons.

Center for Public Interest Journalism to partner with local media

The Philadelphia Media Network will begin a collaboration with Temple’s Center for Public Interest Journalism in an effort to provide in-depth reporting on Philadelphia’s mayoral race this year.

Stan Wischnowski, vice president of news operations at the Inquirer, Daily News and philly.com, said in an email on Tuesday that “‘The Next Mayor’ project will provide voters with critical, timely content on mayoral candidates and the major issues facing Philadelphia.”

Wischnowski added that the project is being funded by a $350,000 grant by the Wyncote Foundation, which issues grants in many different fields, including arts & culture, education, the environment, health & human services, preservation and public media & journalism, according to its website.

Other outlets that will be involved in the project include WHYY/Newsworks, Young Involved Philly and The Committee of Seventy, Wischnowski said.

He said he hopes that “The Next Mayor” is the start of further collaborations between media outlets.

“We hope ‘The Next Mayor’ project will pave the way for other initiatives that similarly support innovative news practices, while retaining our journalistic mission and integrity,” Wischnowski said.
Steve Bohnel can be reached at steven.bohnel@temple.edu or on Twitter @Steve_Bohnel.

Kenney visits Main Campus to talk marijuana decriminalization

Students and faculty attended a panel discussion, “The Decriminalization of Marijuana and its Effects on Policing,” on Tuesday morning.

The discussion was held at 10:00 a.m. in Alter Hall and concluded soon after 11:00 a.m.

In October of last year, Philadelphia decriminalized the possession of under 30 grams of marijuana, reducing the sanctions from arrest to a civil violations notice and a fine of up to $100.

The panelists in attendance were James Kenney, councilperson of the City of Philadelphia, Lieutenant Brian Sprowal from the Philadelphia Police, Charlie Leone, executive director of Campus Safety Services, Tondala Bausano, assistant director, of the Philadelphia Police Scientific Services Division and Mark Denys, director of Temple student health services.

Panelists took questions from the audience and addressed topics including changes in drug trafficking patterns, the possibility of expunging past drug offenses from offenders’ records, and fully legalizing medicinal marijuana in the future.

Health risks associated with smoking marijuana were also emphasized.

Leone addressed the possible effects of the policy on the Temple community. He cautioned against purchasing marijuana from unreputable or unknown sources.

“You’ve got to be careful what you’re buying … [Decriminalization] doesn’t mean [marijuana] is legal,” Leone said. “Some of the students get involved in the purchase and selling of marijuana and that puts them at risk for a lot of things.”
Lian Parsons can be reached at lian.parsons@temple.edu or on Twitter @Lian_Parsons.

CLA appoints interim dean

A new dean and associate dean were named to lead the College of Liberal Arts, the university announced in a press release today.

William Stull, the former chair of the Economics department who served for 18 years, will serve as interim dean. The former chair of the Political Science department, Richard Deeg, will become senior associate dean for operations.

Teresa Soufas, who had served as CLA dean for seven years, resigned Jan. 7 due to health reasons, according to a memo to faculty sent by Provost Hai-Lung Dai.

Stull had previously served as a senior associate dean in the Fox School of Business.

A national search will be conducted for the new dean during the 2015-16 academic year, and an appointment will be announced by 2016, the release read.
Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Cawley recalled from Board of Trustees

On Jan. 21, only his second day in office, Gov. Tom Wolf recalled more than two dozen of former Gov. Tom Corbett’s eleventh-hour appointments, including Jim Cawley, the former lieutenant governor who served on Temple’s Board of Trustees as an ex-officio member during Corbett’s term.

“Prior to being sworn-in as governor, my predecessor put forth several eleventh hour executive nominations,” Wolf said in a statement provided by his Press Secretary Jeff Sheridan. “These moves were murky and the process was anything but open and transparent.”

“We must work to make sure every Pennsylvanian has good reason to trust the government that serves them, and these are the types of actions that make people legitimately distrust their government,” Wolf added in the statement.

The move has already upset Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman.

“The honeymoon is over,” Corman told the Inquirer. “[Wolf] is not off to a flying start, for someone who said he was going to do things differently.”

Temple offered a short statement on the appointment: “The process for the appointment of Commonwealth trustees to Temple’s board is handled by the Governor and the General Assembly,” a spokesman said in an email.

Cawley, a Bucks County native who received Temple degrees in political science and law, now serves as head of United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey. Temple trustee Lon Greenberg serves as chair of the regional United Way’s Board of Directors, and trustee J. William Mills, formerly a regional president of PNC Bank, serves as a regular member of the board.

Cawley could not be reached after multiple requests for comment on the Temple appointment. He told the Inquirer that his “whole career has been about public service and has been about improving the quality of life for the people who were in whatever community that I was part of. I see this role as continuing that.”

Greenberg told the Inquirer that Cawley’s experience in state government could be beneficial for the charity.

“As Lieutenant Governor, he also has a unique understanding of how United Way’s impact areas connect, and how strategic improvements in education, income, and health can lift the entire region,” Greenberg said.

Cawley served on the board twice as a governor’s non-voting representative – once under Mark Schweiker and again under Corbett. He told The Temple News in an interview before the 2014 elections that he would appreciate a future at the university.

“I am happy and honored to to serve Temple University in any way that I can,” Cawley said. “If there’s an opportunity [in the long-term] future … I would jump at the chance at any time.”

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

Steve Bohnel contributed reporting.

2.3 issue: News in brief

OLD TUCC BOOKSTORE TO CLOSE

The bookstore located on the third floor of Temple’s Center City Campus on 15th and Market streets will permanently close at 4 p.m. on Feb. 6 in anticipation of the opening of a new bookstore.

William Parshall, executive director of Temple’s Ambler and Center City campuses, wrote in an email that a new café and Barnes and Noble bookstore is expected to open on the ground floor on March 2.

Parshall added that the three-week transition period is needed for moving inventory, products and security and computer systems from the third floor to the ground level.

Students who need to purchase books during the transition period should contact the Main Campus bookstore at 215-204-5578 or by email at sm693@bncollege.com. Books can be ordered and picked up at the Main Campus location or shipped to a home address at a standard shipping speed for free. Orders can also be placed online and picked up at the new TUCC bookstore location once it opens.

Parshall wrote that students looking to buy school supplies should shop at the Staples located on 15th and Chestnut streets, and that snacks and beverages are still available in vending machines located on the second, third, fourth and fifth floors in the Center City building.

The Inquirer reported in December that Accesso Partners LLC, a real estate firm located in Florida, bought the property that includes TUCC for $85 million. The previous owner of the 502,000 sq. ft. building was Winthrop Realty Trust, a real estate investment trust based in New York and Boston.

-Steve Bohnel

NONPROFIT TRAINING OFFERED

Two international Temple campuses have joined efforts to start a nonprofit training program.

Temple’s Harrisburg and Japan campuses started offering the International Nonprofit  Training and Leadership Program on Jan. 30, according to a university press release.

According to the program’s website, six courses are taught by instructors who have experience working in the nonprofit sector in not just the United States, but also worldwide. The classes are offered on a completely online platform via WebEx, a web conferencing site.

Two of the six courses are in collaboration with Temple University Japan, while the remaining are created for audiences from the United States.

Eugenia Medrano, director of continuing education at Temple University Japan, said in the press release that the program should be effective for students looking to break into the nonprofit sector.

“Students will gain exposure to diverse concepts and ideas and will have a tool kit to immediately apply what they have learned at their places of employment,” Medrano said. “The scope of the nonprofit sector continues to grow internationally – more and more nonprofit organizations and businesses are working together locally, nationally and globally to provide the best possible service to their clients.”

The program is scheduled to run through December 2015.

-Steve Bohnel

NEW SCHOLARSHIP FOR ‘FLY IN 4’

A member of the Board of Trustees recently created a scholarship fund in collaboration with the university’s ‘Fly in 4’ Program.

According to a university press release, Alan M. Cohen, executive vice president and global head of compliance at Goldman Sachs, created The Alan and Deborah Cohen Goldman Sachs Scholarship Fund because of a recommendation by Goldman Sachs Gives, a donor-advised fund where current senior employees can suggest grants to qualified non-profit organizations.

The scholarship, named after Cohen and his wife, Deborah Cohen, is worth $350,000. Both contributed funding, and Deborah said in the release that she and her husband wanted to give back because they were fortunate enough to attend college themselves.

“Both of us were in the first generation of our families to attend college, and that was largely because Temple was so affordable,” Cohen said. “We feel like we were given a huge gift to get a high-quality education and pursue our dreams, so this is our way of giving back.”

The first two recipients of the award are freshmen Melanie Tucci and Brianna Seay, who are both from Philadelphia. Tucci and Seay are majoring in international business and psychology, respectively.

Alan Cohen was elected to the Board of Trustees in May 2014, The Temple News reported. His term started May 13 and is scheduled to end Oct. 10, 2017.

-Steve Bohnel

RECORD YEAR IN ATHLETIC GIFTS

Last year, donations to major college athletic programs totaled $1.26 billion dollars, the third time in the last four years that institutions have eclipsed the billion-dollar mark, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.

The figure was calculated through a “Voluntary Support of Education” survey from the Council for Aid to Education, which is the first organization to offer statistics on private individuals donating to higher education, according to its website.

Almost 400 colleges provided information about athletic donations for the survey, and last year was the highest mark the donation total has reached in the survey during the past decade.

 Leading the way in athletic donations was Texas A&M University, whose $93.6 million total almost doubled any other college that was included in the survey. The University of Michigan was in second, tallying $54.6 million.

Greg Byrne, vice president for athletics at the University of Arizona, said that donations will be needed more in the future due to decreasing funding from state budgets.

“A lot of the facilities we compete in were built with state dollars, and that will rarely happen anymore,” Byrne told the Chronicle. “Many of us have had to look ourselves in the mirror as our infrastructure has needed replacing, and realize that philanthropic gifts are going to be the only way to solve that issue.”

The record year represents a huge increase in athletic donations – according to figures the Council for Aid to Education provided to the Chronicle, athletic departments brought in approximately twice as much money from them last year than in 2004.

-Steve Bohnel