The president of a small Maryland college who likened struggling freshmen to bunnies that should be drowned resigned Monday, nearly six weeks after the student newspaper published the comment and ignited a national firestorm of criticism.
Simon Newman, a former financial industry executive, was in his first year as president of Mount St. Mary’s University, the nation’s second-oldest Catholic university, about 60 miles northwest of Baltimore. The school of 2,300 was previously known mainly for its four NCAA men’s basketball tournament appearances.
Board of Trustees Chairman John Coyne announced Newman’s departure in a statement Monday night after the board met to discuss its two-week inquiry into the matter. Coyne said Karl Einolf, dean of the college’s business school, was named acting president.
“The board is grateful to President Newman for his many accomplishments over the past year, including strengthening the university’s finances, developing a comprehensive strategic plan for our future and bringing many new ideas to campus that have benefited the entire Mount community,” Coyne said.
Coyne declined an interview request through school spokesman Christian Kendzierski.
Pre-law Program Director Edward Egan, who was removed as adviser to The Mountain Echo student newspaper after the story ran, also declined an interview request when reached by phone.
Former faculty member John Schwenkler, who helped organize opposition to Newman among college faculty nationwide, said he was celebrating the news.
“I think that the collective efforts of a lot of concerned academics are a big part of this, and I feel privileged to have been part of that,” said Schwenkler, an assistant professor of philosophy at Florida State University. “I hope that this is a sign to administrators at other institutions about what the academic community won’t tolerate and about the power of that community to unify against certain abuses.”
Schwenkler started an online petition, signed by more than 8,500 people, calling for reinstatement of Egan and Thane Naberhaus, a philosophy professor, after Newman fired them in early February. They were fired, and the university provost was demoted, after a board investigation concluded the Echo story was a deliberate attack on Newman, perpetrated by a small number of faculty and recent alumni. Egan, fired for “violating the code of conduct and acceptable use policies,” was reinstated as a faculty member, but not newspaper adviser, Feb. 12. Naberhaus, who had publicly criticized Newman, was also reinstated after he was fired for violating “a duty of loyalty” to the university.
The story that triggered the firings described Newman’s plan to identify struggling freshmen and offer them help, or tuition refunds if they chose to leave school early in their first semester. The story quoted from a Newman email saying he hoped 20 to 25 students would leave before the cutoff date for reporting the school’s enrollment to the federal government, thereby boosting the student-retention rate, one of the factors publications such as U.S. News & World Report use in ranking desirable colleges. Critics said the plan seemed more focused on weeding out struggling students than helping them succeed.
The newspaper reported that Newman had told a faculty member opposed to the plan: “This is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can’t. You just have to drown the bunnies … put a Glock to their heads.” Newman later acknowledged he used those words and apologized for them.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Yet another shining example of how the “hire a CEO from the private sector to run it like a business” philosophy invariably works out.
Things that can be run like businesses are already running that way because they’re already businesses. The reason the other things aren’t run like businesses is because they deliver public goods that things run like businesses can’t. And when you hire a CEO, or worse, a hedge fund manager, to “run them like a business” you inevitably get clusterfucks like this, like Flint water poisoned with lead, like Blackwater mercs gunning down civilians and getting themselves lynched, like charter schools that teach no science and say George Washington was a theocrat, like Trump University and on and on and on . . .
I honestly don’t understand why this is so hard for so many people to grasp. But they cling to the notion with all the fervor of religious fanatics.
Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome President Donald Drumpf’s nominee for Secretary of Education.
<#makedonalddrumpfagain>
You are so right - and this is the trend in academia. Many college presidents no longer have any background in education. They don’t even pretend to want to understand the common issues of students and faculty. It is about money and rankings. I am lucky because I have thoroughly enjoyed most of my 30 years as a professor, but I wouldn’t enter the field today. There is no longer much value placed on what we used to think of as the mission of higher education.
Mind boggling!!! Apparently NO ONE on the Board of Directors of a religious university thought it might not be the best "fit’ to have some raving, hedge fund scum running a Catholic university. Yeah, turns out that CEO experience wasn’t really what they needed after all.
Flipping insane
Hiring a CEO is a bad idea? But, Drumpf 2016!?? Vote for him he’s an outsider.
You could hit Trump supporters with dozens of these stories and they still would refuse to wake up