THE BEHREND BEACON Outgoing president by Jack Wheat Knight-Ridder Tribune November 01, 1999 GAINESVILLE, Fla. Lombardi, a historian, insists that only time will tell his legacy as president of the University of Florida in the 19905, a tumultuous hut mostly triumphant decade for the state's oldest and most prestigious university "Significance is not my problem. That's for somebody else to figure out," Lombardi said days before his Nov. 1 exit from the president's office. He will remain at Gainesville, taking up faculty duties in classrooms and an office carved out of the former athletic dorm. Lombardi was hired in November 1989 and took office in March 1990. The Lombardi decade saw OF break into the ranks of the top 25 public universities by almost any standard. This fall, it ranked lOth in the annual U.S. News & World Report college guide, the country's most widely read college rankings. "These are things the people of the University of Florida .-accomplished," Lombardi said. ' "The only thing that distinguishes me is I can sing the song of the University of Florida with a voice that accurately reflects the aspirations and achievements of the people of the University of Florida." But some people, including members of the Board of Regents, with whom Lombardi often crossed swords, are saving Lombardi's modest closing lines need amplification. Regent Welcom Watson of Fort Lauderdale said Lombardi not only sang, but taught UF's faculty, staff, students, alumni, donors and other supporters the lyrics. He made them Mink die‘ n uld Syracuse football player condition after bar stabbing by Christine Tatum TNIS Campus November 01. 1999 SYRACUSE, N.Y. (TMS) A senior starter on Syracuse University's football team remained in critical condition Monday after being stabbed during a melee that resulted in several arrests and sent at least four people including two other players to area hospitals. University and city officials are still trying to make sense of the brawl, which erupted early Sunday and involved as many as 75 people hanging out at "Sadie's Place," a bar whose troubled past has prompted many SU students to dub it "Shady's." "This is not a good establishment, and it's not a regular, college-student hangout," said Syracuse spokesman Kevin Morrow. "We know our athletes shouldn't have been there, but right now, we're focused on our hope for David Byrd's recovery." Byrd, 21, a senior defensive hack from Schenectady, N.Y., was rushed Students protest newspaper for on academic standards by Christine Tatum TMS Campus November 04, 1999 NORTHRIDGE, Calif. (TMS) —A Chicano student group at California State Unversity at Northridge is protesting the student newspaper for what it says was a harsh and insensitive editorial supporting a new state requirement that flunks out freshmen who fail to meet remedial standards in their first academic year. NATIONAL CAMPUS NEWS University looks back do it, and they did, - Watson said. The major Lombardi headlines stemmed from his high-profile skirmishes and occasional blunders. Twice in the past four years confrontations between Lombardi and regents ere settled in "He made them think they could do it and they did." Wat , am 1 at lot t Lauderdale Lombardi's favor by raw political In 1995, a conflict over the university presidents' authority almost led Lombardi to accept an offer to become president of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Ile stayed after the late Gov. Law ton Chiles and other powerful supporters compelled regents to rewrite policies to his liking. His most notable controversy erupted from a 1 1 )97 dinner-table conversation at a Christmas party for l'F's highest administrators. lie offhandedly referred to Adam Herbert, a black man who soon would become State University System chancellor, as an "oreo," and the remark , A as reported to regents and Herbert. Lombardi, ho has often been praised for supporting minorities. apologised for his gaffe, but regents seiicd on the Ile \N. OpPOrtt.lllll, to ou,t 1.01111)ardi. Again, financial hackers rose to protect Lombal di. I le kept his joh almost 1110 more years. into surgery at University Hospital with chest w ounds near his heart. Also hurt were junior defensive tackle Duke Pettijohn, 22. of Mattapan, Miss., and sophomore offensive tackle Giovanni Del.oatch. 20, of Teaneck, N.J. Pettijohn and Dekoatch were treated in area hospitals for cuts on their bodies and heads and were released. Two other men, who are not SU students but are friends of the players, also were injured during the fight. One remained hospitalized in critical condition Monday, while the other was treated and released. Syracuse police found two knives at the scene and charged two men in connection with the fight: Cheiron Thomas and Trequill Stackhouse. both 22. Thomas is charged with first degree gang assault and second degree assault, and Stackhouse is charged with first-degree gang assault and first-degree assault. More arrests are expected, police said. Investigators spent much of Monday trying to determine what started the fight. Police at the scene said bouncers tried to clear the bar after The Sundial's editorial displayed under the headline "How Did They Get Here in the First Place'?" read: "If students who attend CSUN cannot pass a remedial English or math class, do not admit them into the university to begin with." It ends with the rhetorical question: "Isn't it better to pull the weed out by its root, instead of merely snipping the en d s?" The editorial did not name any ethnic group, but students said it indirectly targeted of Florida on tenure "What saved John twice was the vision he put up for the university, - Watson said. "If you tried to mess ‘‘. ith it, people jumped on you." l_oinhai di resigned in August after Ilerhert made clear that he would deliver a performance review to regents that would put Lombardi's j 01) in jeopardy again. Issues included large raises to four key Lombardi lieutenants, and a complaint from two visiting law Means ihat he hUIIICII them w hen they w erc rev icw inC OF law school. Watson saki all that is history now. "Everybody feels good about what he's done at the university." I.ombardi is a charismatic speaker and a leading scholar of Venezuelan history. Ile had experience at three leading American universities before coming to CF. I lis graduate studies were done at Columbia in New York City l le was a professor and dean at Indiana university. Ile vas provost of Johns I lopkins in 1989. Ills 110 h y is overhauling automobile engines -- usually the one in his red pickup -- and his approach to administration is tinkering, twitching and overhauling. The side effects of the I.omhardi method include a number of embittered former high-level administrators w ho were cast aside, and professors w ho lost their ready access to LI: funds as a result of Lombardi's efforts to increase productivity. Ile engaged in no holds-barred battling with the Board of Regents' staff. and more cautious sparring with the Legislature over budget restrictions he said made universitic inefficient, kept faculty ,;ilarie, lw.‘, Lind hc LI up construction ut much needed facilities. By 1999, man \ ol the te,trictions were gone. Faculty salaries remain below the national average. but the Legislature ha, pro \ substantial special NmcHim; marijuana. AN the crowd outNitie erev, thicker. some of the ,11\pect, and ‘ictinl , , exchanged v,ords. Soon, the tics unarmed ictims ere overpowered by more than a halt-do/en ',mat l:ers, many Of hom evons, police said. The player' and their friends did not appear to lito. c heen targeted because of their athlete status, police said. racu,e head roach Paul Pasqualoin. ho spent Sunday at the tnispital. said he as "shocked and saddened that such incident could occur. Our program di,courages tirticrit-aililete from going to a place lik this.'' said in a prepared ~ taternent - The notion of staying out of this kind of establishment will be reint()rLed by both the football pri):2l - 1111 and athletics department." Sadie', (lace, owned by the wife of an Onondaga County sheriff's deputy, has seen its fair share of trouhle in the past few years. In February. a Syracuse man was stabbed there after trying to break up a fight them. Last fall, 75 percent of Latino freshmen needed remedial math, and 71) percent needed remedial English. That compared with 63 percent of all Northridge freshmen needing help in math and 59 percent in English. At an Associated Students meeting Tuesday, two members of MEChA -- an acronym for Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de \ - said the student NOVEMBER 12, 1999 raises for thousands of excellent faculty statewide through programs Lombardi championed. As OF enrollment grew from 34,000 to 43,000, the school developed a system for advising and tracking undergraduates that has steadily increased the number of students graduating within four years. Much of UF's rise stemmed from an early Lombardi initiative. OF is the only Florida school in the Association of American Universities, an elite group of leading research institutions. Lombardi required departments to compare themselves to their counterparts at the top public AA U universities. UF's administrative reforms, lobbying, fund-raising and other initiatives have focused on closing the gaps. lie was not afraid to tell the regents that while the OF was great in Florida, it could get a lot better nationally, and he put forth the data to back it up," said Florida International University Provost Mark Rosenberg. "The better the University of Florida gets, the better every other university in the system gets. They raise the level, and that helps us set a higher standard." Michael Browne, who was student body president and now is a Procter & Gamble executive, said, "We thought we had climbed the mountain. Dr. Lombardi showed us we had climbed a big hill. but we had a long way to go." Orlando businesswoman Joan Railer, a former regent who was chairwoman of the board when the 1989 presidential search began, said the final assessment of Lombardi is simple: "He recognized excellence and showed the university how to get there.- in critical Last November, former Syracuse University football player Antwaune Ponds started a fight with a woman outside the bar and held a 6-inch knife to her throat. He was later charged with menacing and criminal possession of a weapon. Police have also reported at least two other serious assaults just outside the bar. Despite the bar's bad reputation, Syracuse players told police they often go there because it's off campus and gives them some privacy from students and fans. That allure may have prompted the players' visit to Sadie's on Saturday night. The fight broke out only hours after Syracuse's 24-23 loss to Boston College, a decided underdog, in the Carrier Dome. "It's a terrible tragedy that no SU athlete nor student should go through," said Adam Schweizer, a junior education major. "And it is a big loss for the team and the school if none of them play again." Campus Correspondents Erica Levi and Claire Weingarden contributed to this report. its stance The newspaper's editorial board has refused to apologize for the newspaper's stance, which also sparked a protest by about 30 Latino students outside the Sundial's offices last week."l'm in a confusing situation here," Sundial editor Brian Franks told the L.A. Times. "I support their right to protest and I can see where they're coming from, but at the same time we have a First Amendment right to publish an Lilt editorial." College bookstore group sues online rival for false advertising by Donna De Marco Knight-Ridder Newspapers November 03, 1999 Varsityßooks.com, the on-line college bookstore, is being sued by the National Association of College Stores for false and misleading advertising. The suit, tiled in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, claims the Washington-based on-line retailer is misleading consumers in its advertising for large discounts on textbooks The National Association of College Stores (NACS), which has 3,000 members, is seeking a permanent injunction to halt the advertising., "Our members have been targeted by a new competitor," said Cynthia D' Angelo, a spokeswoman for the association. "Some of their advertising claims are attacking our members falsely." According to the lawsuit filed Oct. 2 9 , Varsityßooks.com's advertisements, which claim to offer college textbooks at a 40 percent discount, are implying that NACS member stores overcharge students for textbooks. College stores will suffer irreparable damage as a result, Miss D'Angelo said. "The lawsuit filed against Varsityßooks.com for false and misleading advertising is completely without merit and we plan to contest it vigorously," said Jonathan Kaplan, a vice president at Varsityßooks. "Varsityßooks.com offers college students a choice when buying textbooks, and that choice means better prices, more convenience and Judge rules in favor of professor claiming violation of his free-speech rights TMS Campus November 04, 1999 SAN DIEGO (TMS) A federal judge has ruled in favor of a college professor who claimed his First Amendment rights were violated when the South Orange County Community College District ordered him to get anger-management counseling and to soften the language in two newsletters he publishes. U.S. District Court Judge Gary Allen Feess ruled in favor of Roy Bauer, a philosophy professor at Irvine Valley College, one of two campuses in the community college district. Bauer is the chief editor of two publications that have bashed the district's administrators: "The Dissent," a newsletter about the district, and "The 'Vine," which focuses on the college. In them, Bauer has published fictional accounts of the grisly deaths of trustees and of his desire to drop a huge block of granite on the college president's head. In November 1998, he described a room full of district administrators and wrote: "In real value. College students didn't used to have that choice." Varsityßooks.com was founded in December of 1997, when Eric Kuhn and Tim Levy invested $25,000 to start the company that became the first on-line college textbook retailer. Varsitrßooks.com had $42,000 in net sales in 1998, which grew to $5.1 million for the first eight months of 1999, according to the registration statement the company filed yesterday "Our members have been targeted by a new competitor:" - Cynthia D' Angelo, a spokeswoman for NACS with the Securities and Exchange Commission Despite its rapid growth, the company is still not profitable, reporting a $13.9 million operating loss for the first eight months of this year. Last month Varsityßooks.com announced plans to go public with a $75 million offering. "We're disappointed that [the NACS] would bring this baseless action [against us] to try to stop Varsityßooks.com from competing against them," Mr. Kaplan said a room like that, no decent person could resist the urge to go postal." District Chancellor Cedric A. Sampson ordered Bauer to tone down his work after several district officials said they feared for their safety. Bauer responded by filing suit against the district in January. In his ruling, released last week, Feess found that "the speech in question is a core protected speech and there is no applicable First Amendment limitation that would permit the discipline to be imposed on Bauer." He added: "No reasonable person could have concluded that the written words of Bauer constituted a serious expression of an intent to harm or assault." Sampson told The Chronicle of Higher Education that the district is likely to appeal the decision. "For us this is a significant problem: how to protect the free speech of our professors and protect the workplace environment from threats of violence. The judge felt the language used by Mr. Bauer was protected speech. We viewed it as threats of violence, and we still do." PAGE 8