Donations Continued from Page 1 Programs Oregon Campaign donors have many ways to direct their money throughout the University. They can give one-time gifts or make a long-term gift commitment. They can endow a faculty chair or ini tiate a student scholarship pro gram. But donors also have the op portunity to establish gifts with very specific purposes, be they funding new fields of study, as donor James Warsaw did for sports marketing, or building new facilities, as donor Phil Knight, Nike’s CEO, did for the new law school. If a donation to a college is un designated, the dean of the col lege decides where the money goes. An undesignated donation to the University ends up in the hands of President Dave Frohn mayer. There are limits, however. Donors are screened through out the process to make sure their requests mesh with academic priorities and are in the Universi ty’s best interest, said Duncan McDonald, vice president for public affairs and development. In these discussions, donations are dictated by University needs and not donor needs McDonald said. Academic freedom threatened? Critics of the program question whether private donations are in the best interest of the Universi ty. Julie Fox, an adjunct sociology Burton • Santa Cruz Morrow • Rossignol Airwalk • Switch Salomon • K2 a csr YOUR SNOWBOARDING HEADQUARTERS 13th & Lawrence, Eugene • 683-1300 Tune-Up Special Includes flat filing, custom wet belting, base repair and hot wax skis f) 515 h ) .,-S snowboards 515 Berg’/ /hi/hop Mon-Sat 10-7 • Sun 12-5 13th & Lawrence * 683-1300 professor, believes that the Uni versity’s new emphasis on donor money creates a situation where the University and its faculty be gin to worry about criticizing funding sources in their academ ic research. Fox posed a couple of ques tions: Would there be a tendency for donors to cut off their dona tions if the University criticized their business practices or poli tics? And would the University then stifle its research to keep the money? This situation has happened before. Perhaps the most publi cized event occurred at Yale Uni versity in 1995. Yale alumnus Lee Bass had given $20 million in 1991 to cre ate more Western civilization courses. He asked for it back in 1995 after controversy erupted because some faculty members believed the courses weren’t needed, according The Chronicle of Higher Education. Yale officials said their deci sion to give the money back hinged on Bass's insistence that he approve the instructors for the new courses.. Fox said she believes a similar story happened when she taught sociology at Loyola University in New Orleans in 1995. Freeport McMoRan, a global mining cor poration, had given $600,000 to establish an environmental com munications chair. The gift sparked debate across the campus because of charges that the corporation treated its In donesian workers poorly and that the company had a poor en vironmental record. The criticism culminated in a protest outside the home of the corporation’s CEO, after which The New Orleans Times Picayune reported that the CEO asked Loyola for its money back. But money stayed and the chair was filled a year later. Fox has publicly charged and criti cized Loyola for trying to sanc tion those involved in the protest, although the university claims no such thing occurred. Fox, who came to Eugene as an adjunct professor that same year, said she’s seen potential for con flict here. Students and faculty have protested Nike on campus in re cent years, making charges of poor labor practices in Southeast Asia. And yet the University took a $25 million donation from Knight, seemingly an endorse ment by students and the Univer sity of Nike practices, she said. “Well, the workers would like recognition for what they gave,” Fox said. "Philanthropy obscures where the money is coming from.” In her mind, corporate philan thropy also hinders the Universi ty’s academic freedom because faculty members may fear that any research critical of the com pany could result in the compa (( I've never had anybody tell me to behave a certain way or do certain research because of a donor. » Lynn Kahle Sports marketing professor ny pulling its money out, as hap pened at Loyola, Sociology graduate student Ann Strahm said she was dis couraged by sociology faculty members from pursuing a disser tation critical of Nike, because it woidd probably put any graduate review committee in an uncom fortable position. McDonald called the idea that fund raising from the Oregon Campaign could cause a silenc ing of research and criticism against private donors “paranoid and idiotic." He said the Univer sity would never sacrifice its aca demic freedom. “What professor, what director ... in their right mind would ever want to suppress” criticism, he said, "if in fact what a university is all about is research, inquiry and discussion.” McDonald said that he’s been amazed at how low-key donors have been, almost to the point of being shy at wanting any recogni tion — a far cry from trying to dictate the University’s func tions. "People contribute to the Uni versity and ask for little in re turn,” he said. He also points to the strong fac ulty government that stands be hind campus research and wouldn’t be silenced if it felt pressured by the implications of the campaign. "Am I aware that anything like this has every happened? Ab solutely not,” he said. “Would I stand for it? No.” Word Around Campus If individual cases show there is pressure not to criticize Nike on campus, sociology assistant professor Michael Dreiling said, they wouldn’t directly show that a donor’s influence on campus is silencing research. Instead, Dreiling focuses on the overall effect of private mon ey on campus. He said he sees private money having more and more control over the Universi ty’s curriculum. “Why do we have a business school and one of the only sports marketing programs in the coun try?” he said. “These are the questions we should ask our selves" “But why don't we have a la bor studies program?” Dreiling believes private fund raising and the donors’ ability to fund specific programs is leading the University in a direction that focuses on producing students with marketable knowledge in stead of students who are critical thinkers and good citizens. A simple comparison between the campus’s run-down build ings and newly renovated build ings shows where donors are em phasizing scholarship, he said. “Who’s working in those buildings? What kind of non marketable knowledge is being produced out of those arenas?” he said. Fox claims that companies — or individuals who represent companies — are giving money to receive the indirect benefit of free student research. She points to Sports Specialties Corporation President James Warsaw, a sports-cap producer, and his cre ation of the sports marketing de partment as the quintessential example. Sports marketing professor Lynn Kahle said there’s much critical learning occurring in the business school, one of the build ings to receive $10 million in 1994, and it doesn’t have to do strictly with research that compa nies can use. He points to his own studies, where he is less focused on sports marketing and more on the psychological questions behind consumerism. He said that sports marketing department research does benefit the industry in general, but busi ness research is published in public places where anyone can use it, not solely a specific com pany. Kahle, who has been at the business school 15 years, said he is appreciative of the private money coming into the Universi ty. He doesn’t buy the argument that his research would he taint ed by the needs of donors. “I’ve never had anybody tell me to behave a certain way or do certain research because of a donor,” he said. And often, donors have com peting businesses and marketing theories, he said. In sports marketing, for exam ple, Knight’s and Warsaw’s mar keting philosophies often contra dict each other. “If my academic integrity has been bought by a gift, which way would I go?" he said. Some on campus tend to think society hasn’t given enough to higher education. Bill Harbaugh, an assistant economics professor whose re search focuses on why people give money to charities, has con cluded that people give money not for the quid pro quo or tax break, but for the warm glow they receive from it. Harbaugh said he believes peo ple are not charitable enough and that society would like them to give more. He sees private donations from the Oregon Campaign in the same way. The University has come up with a way to praise and recognize donors, he said, and donors are now forking over their share. Although there is potential for donors to try to forward their agendas, most donors initiate programs that are positive, such as Judaic Studies, he said. “It’s a totally worthwhile thing,” he said. “It’s hard to argue that that’s a problem.” Janis Weeks, biology depart ment head, said the University is between a rock and a hard place. “We’re trying to run the best university we can with ever-de creasing resources," she said. "We have to look at whatever possible funding ... but we don’t want to sell our souls to the dev il.” Weeks said most Oregon Cam paign money in her department has been focused on student scholarship. But she is leery of donations that might have political conse quences or corporate interests be hind them. And she wants to know how donations are evaluat ed before the University accepts them. uuestioning bins The UO Foundation has a gift acceptance policy. Smaller dona tions and donors are approved by deans of colleges and develop ment officials. Larger gifts go through the University adminis tration or Frohnmayer. McDonald said no gift has ever been challenged. The policy states a gift could be denied in the following cases: if it fell outside the boundaries of approved curriculum or faculty position; if the donor gained un due influence over the Universi ty through the donation; if the money was “tainted” - given through illegal or questionable sources; or the donor is “notori ous,” as a donor with a Mafia, Nazi or terrorist background would be. In most situations, McDonald said, a public challenge would occur only after the University al ready accepted the money. The gifts can be returned, he said. He advises concerned mem bers of the University communi ty to first question a dean or de partment head about a gift, and if still unsatisfied to request a for mal review of the gift. Harbaugh believes it’s an ade quate system. “The real question is, if the money’s perfectly legal, but some people just have moral qualms about its source, should they be able to prevent the University from taking the money?” he said. Harbaugh said no. 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