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Daily Egyptian FRIDAY
COLUMN, P. 6: Gus Bode says get involved!
AUGUST 28, 2009
VOLUME 95 NO. 5
16 PAGES
Sierra Club Derecho destruction creates construction critical of SIUC’s coal research Madeleine Leroux DAILY EGYPTIAN
MLEROUX@SIU.EDU
EVAN DAVIS | D AILY E GYPTIAN Carpenter Kelly Gonzalez helps co-worker and owner of Southern Illinois Builders Chris Nikolic clean up debris Thursday. The debris was left over from the May 8 storm that downed trees and caused damage throughout Carbondale. “Other contractors hate us because we do everything,” Nikolic said. The two men are clearing the area of what used to be an enclosed porch before strong winds brought down a tree larger than house. They are scheduled to build an addition to the home located near E. College and S. Gay Streets.
SIUC has been attempting to go green through efforts such as the Green Fee and a sustainability council, but the university was still declared a failure in the latest issue of the Sierra Club magazine. The September/October issue released the third annual Cool Schools list, in which universities nationwide were ranked by environmental commitments. SIUC was not on the general rankings list, but did make the list of the three schools that failed, along with DePaul University and Texas Tech. Avital Binshtock, lifestyle editor of the Sierra Club magazine and editor of the Cool Schools list, said schools are ranked by a 10-page questionnaire sent to sustainability coordinators or press agents of colleges and universities. Those that are filled out and sent back to the magazine are then ranked by several areas of environmental issues, Binshtock said. Jon Dyer, a senior from Edwardsville studying geography and environmental resources, said the survey was not sent to the correct person, which is why it was never filled out and returned.
See SIERRA | 4
Judicial Review Board set to decide own future Stile T. Smith DAILY EGYPTIAN STS34@SIU.EDU
The Faculty Senate’s Judicial Review Board is meeting today for the first time since March to decide if it will continue hearing faculty grievances. The board suspended itself following an incident last spring involving a professor in the School of Law and the former dean of the same school.
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have asked the JRB to reconvene and to begin hearing faculty grievances again. — Phillip Howze Faculty Senate President
The issue arose after associate professor Jill Adams was placed on two-year probation in March by former dean Peter Alexander for “not meet(ing) the expectations of the School of Law.” Adams appealed the decision to the Faculty Senate’s Judicial
Review Board, a 12-person committee that reviews faculty complaints against other faculty and administrators. The board unanimously sided with Adams. Chancellor Sam Goldman rejected the board’s decision, but the Office of the President reversed his decision during the summer. Faculty Senate President Phillip Howze said he would be happy to see the board back in action. “The case has been resolved; it was resolved over the summer,” Howze said. “I have asked the JRB to reconvene and to begin hearing faculty grievances again.” Farzad Pourboghrat, an electrical and computer engineering professor and member of the board, said he thinks the JRB will decide to reconvene. “I have a feeling that we probably will,” Pourboghrat said. “The feeling is that we really want to service the university.” Pourboghrat said it is important to reconvene, because for certain schools in the university, the board is the only voice to hear the faculty’s complaints.
Interim Provost Don Rice said it is important for the faculty to have a place to go to voice theirconcerns. “I think the faculty need a forum. We have fully intended that there be a grievance process,” Rice said. “I think the fact that
there is a forum and the fact that faculty can be heard in that forum is appropriate.” If the board does decide to reconvene, Pourboghrat said it could be suspended again under certain circumstances. Pourboghrat said it is vital for
David Schrempt, Morris Library systems specialist, left, helps Phillip Hoze, library information services professor, with a computer problem Thursday in Howze’s new office. Unpacked boxes still fill the room Howze said he enjoys because it is in the same building as his department. EDYTA BŁASZCZYK D AILY E GYPTIAN the board’s decisions to be heard and its decisions to be taken seriously. “There’s hope that the decisions of the JRB from now on will be accepted and not ignored easily,” Pourboghrat said. “If that is not going to work, obviously there’s going to be another consequence.”