Monday, September 29, 2014

ACC with another rough weekend.



JC Shurburtt @jcshurburtt 11 seconds ago
I'd rank the leagues- 1. SEC, 2. Big 12, 3. Pac 12, 4. Big Ten, 5 (by a MILE) ACC
 
 
 
FSU has heard for two decades the conference is improving.  I believe the culture in the ACC hasn't changed and won't in the future.  Football is not a priority with most members.  In 10 years, we will be having the same conversation.

ESPNU Campus Connection Florida State Soccer Support



ESPNU Campus Connection Florida State Soccer Support

Pic of the Day

Friday, September 26, 2014

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Re: Mel Kiper now has Jameis at the bottom of his big board no first



Re: Mel Kiper now has Jameis at the bottom of his big board no first

ShaolinNole
9/25/14

"Jameis has yelled curse words, eaten $32 worth of absconded delicious crab, had a bb gun fight and drank Pepsi from ketchup cups, and had consensual sex with crazy white girls. Immature yes, but hardly worthy of all the hate he gets.

He's also won the Heisman, led his team to winning the NC, passed for 4,000 yards and 40 TD's, averaging just around 3 quarters played per game, half of which was done with the stress of false charges above his head.

NFL guys aren't stupid. The guy is a winner. He will likely be the first QB taken. "

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Jameis media coverage



TomahawkNation.com @TomahawkNation May 10
Zach Mettenberger pleaded guilty to 2 counts sexual battery. Hasn't come up in draft coverage. Jameis never even charged, discussed 24/7.

SECespn actively working to take FSU down?

Embedded image permalink

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Why ESPN Needs You to HATE Jameis Winston and the Florida State Seminoles


Why ESPN Needs You to HATE Jameis Winston and the Florida State Seminoles


"
It has been a wild and crazy past week for the Florida State Seminoles. Their QB, a magnet for controversial news ever since his stint as quarterback for the reigning national champs began last year, once again was at the top of the headlines after being suspended by FSU for a half, then a whole game, for being spotted in the student union yelling a vulgar popular online meme. While we have seen the outrage on TV and on social media forums, and even the anger coming from a small contingent of FSU alumni, we are going to tell you all something you probably didn’t realize and that never occurred to you.
ESPN and the SEC-enamored media desperately WANT you to hate Jameis Winston. They need you to despise him. They’ve been working for you to hate him for a long time. If you don’t hate him by now, you are either an FSU fan or really disconnected from the online and sports entertainment television world. Is it because Winston is one of the most disgusting, criminal minded, moronic menaces to society in sports history? Or is it because the sports media, especially ESPN, is manipulating the public into believing what they need you to believe for their own benefit and the benefit of the SEC? We are going to show you in this article why it is the latter. We are going to lay out why we believe that ESPN and the mainstream media are working overtime to destroy this kid’s character and bury his school so that they never “steal” another championship from the SEC in the near future. And we are going display to you their hypocrisy in encouraging this witch-hunt of a player whose greatest faults pale in comparison to some SEC stars who came before him.
You don’t need to be an FSU supporter to truly see what is going on here. The mainstream media, led by their “worldwide leader in sports entertainment,” is vocally railroading one of the greatest talents of our sports generation simply as revenge for him not launching his stardom in their beloved SEC. And they will not stop until both he and the team that has owned the SEC in recent years pays the ultimate price. FSU and Winston are villains to the SEC. ESPN and other media hacks are now prepared to make them YOUR villain too. If you repeat things often enough to the public in the media, ultimately they begin to believe it as truth. ESPN has been hammering away at the integrity of the FSU star around the clock since the middle of last week when news of the “scandal” broke. And public perception was definitely impacted by the biased coverage of the cursing incident. Before long, people from coast to coast were “outraged.” Outraged that a 20 year old college student cursed loud enough on campus for people to hear. [Pause for perspective to set in.]
Who is this Jameis Winston kid anyway? This horrible menace to society that has ESPN analysts screaming and pounding their makeshift desks about. When we filter out the over-the-top ESPN-driven media bias, it becomes much easier to see who he really is. Jameis Winston is a socially immature and naïve youth in a tremendously gifted athlete’s body. His athletic and on-field leadership ability is head and shoulders above his peers; he plays football like a man among boys. However mentally off the field, he is a boy among men. This is clear to anyone following along with his antics. He doesn’t take things as seriously as people think he should. Perhaps he rose too high to fast. Or perhaps he has simply just always been the “class clown” life of the party and lacks the filter necessary to know when he has gone too far. Or maybe he really is “dumb as a box of rocks” as has been suggested by multiple “respected” media personalities. (Which if true would support our position of SEC recruiting standards since Winston was heavily recruited by much of the SEC before spurning them to choose Florida State.) Much like his Heisman predecessor Johnny “Football” Manziel, Winston is showing us all why freshmen should no longer be allowed to win the Heisman. They can’t handle the attention, the pressure or the expectations that often come with the award, as it all might be too much for a 19 year old kid to process. Nothing Winston has done up to this point (sexual promiscuity, squirrel hunting with BB guns, sneaking soda from a fountain with buddies, taking crab legs from a grocery store “hookup”, or yelling out an obscene phrase from a popular internet meme) could be considered “criminal mischief” for the average 18-19 year old kid. However, Winston is not an average 19 year old kid. Much more is expected of him, and children may look to him as a role model whether they should or shouldn’t. The minute he became a football superstar, he traded in his “average joe” card. Unfortunately, he acts as if nobody told him this. Or maybe they did and he refuses to accept it. The point we are trying to make here is, Jameis Winston is not a lethal criminal mind. He is a simple and very naïve young man who refuses to let his stardom change him. And that may be his biggest mistake, because with athletic stardom comes responsibility. In turn, the media is using every single one of Winston’s mistakes, no matter how minor, as another opportunity to crucify him. We all know, this is how it works in the spotlight for sports stars. The media builds them up so they can tear them down. However, in this situation, some of the greatest effort ever witnessed is being put forth by the media, particularly ESPN, to assure that this kid not only gets torn down, but that he never plays the game of football again at FSU. Their tactics are wrong, their motivations for doing it are wrong, and the manipulative ways they are doing it are wrong.
Sept14pic1
Let’s start with their tactics. First there were the around the clock rotations of analysts one by one bashing Winston’s integrity on air. Then there was the ESPN analyst Zubin Mehenti who gave an angry rant full of racist overtones against Winston (Listen here: http://espn.go.com/espnradio/play?id=11547749). Then there was response from ESPN defending Mehenti’s rant as “free speech” (try to ignore the irony of this excuse here). And who can forget ESPN’s Mark May laying into Winston’s integrity. (Looks like the Gameday attendees in Tallahassee Saturday didn’t let him get away with that hypocrisy without some fact checking though…)
Sept14pic3
Thursday night during the Kansas State-Auburn game, one of ESPN’s favorite SEC Shills Pollack was chatting with his co-shill Palmer up in the analyst booth. Their back and forth kind of revealed much of what ESPN behind the scenes really wanted…
Pollack: I’m not sure if I’m happy about only a half game suspension for Winston.
Palmer: I am.
Pollack: I think it should be the whole game.
Palmer: Oh yeah, because then they could lose!

I’m sure you can only imagine the immense disappointment from ESPN when Clemson could not deliver ESPN’s genie wish for them.
Winston has faced far more scrutiny than likely any other college athlete who has done wrong in the media. And despite never being charged for rape because there was no evidence, even after a prosecutor dug until his nails bled trying to get notoriety for being the guy that could put away the great Jameis Winston (Source: http://secexposed.wordpress.com/2013/11/25/why-a-successful-black-non-sec-college-football-star-is-getting-railroaded-in-the-jim-crow-south/), ESPN continues to report THAT story as if it were an actual prosecuted crime! For many at ESPN, Winston is not only guilty until proven innocent, but he is even guilty WHEN proven innocent!
This begs the question, why is ESPN and the lapdog media so hungry to bury the FSU quarterback? Let’s pretend for a minute that we don’t know about their heavy campaigning to eliminate all SEC threats so that the conference their money is invested in will never have to face a real quality opponent in the four team playoff. Where is the ESPN outrage over the sheer volume of arrests (>50% of all college sports arrests) occurring out of the SEC? (Source: http://secexposed.wordpress.com/2014/07/18/criminal-talent-recruitment-and-media-collusion-make-strange-bedfellows-indeed/). Or better yet how about the closest SEC neighbor to FSU? Where was the media outrage at the University of Florida, an SEC team whose 2008 squad won the national title with arguably the most number of criminals on a championship team in NCAA history (Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/07/sports/ncaafootball/hernandez-among-many-arrested-at-florida-in-the-meyer-years.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0)? Where were the self-righteous ESPN announcers demanding that a title be stripped when it consisted of players arrested for “under-age drinking, disorderly conduct, violations of open-container laws, aggravated stalking, domestic violence by strangulation, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny and fraudulent use of credit cards”; compound that with racism, rape, domestic violence and murder once these stars got to the NFL. According to the NY Times, UF had “a roster of 121 players, 41 of whom have been arrested, either in college or afterward, and sometimes both. That number included 16 players on that season’s final two-deep roster, nine of whom were starters, as well as a kicker, punter and returner.
Perhaps these ESPN hacks would say they are only hammering away at Jameis because he is a Heisman winner and should show better judgment and meet the moral requirements of a Heisman candidate. To that I would respond… really? REALLY? How quickly our convenient memories have forgotten about the SEC’s great Cam “Scam” Newton? Unlike Winston, who has never been arrested for anything despite all the “supposed” this and “we heard him say” that, Newton was actually CHARGED with felony grand theft. From stolen laptops, multiple academic violations, being bounced from UF for cheating, to soliciting payments from the highest bidder to decide where he was going to take his talents (Source: http://www.sportingnews.com/ncaa-football/feed/2010-11/cam-newton-probe/story/chizik-auburn-ad-defend-cameron-newton-amid-allegations), Newton was a walking rap sheet highlight reel. Yet he DID win the Heisman. And today? A successful NFL quarterback with a Gatorade endorsement. Look at what being a SEC media darling can do for you no matter WHAT crimes you commit!
How quickly our convenient memories have also forgotten about the SEC’s great Johnny “Football” Manziel? This guy wasn’t simply reported on twitter for saying curse words in public. He has had actual PICTURES floating around the internet of most of HIS transgressions! Numerous off-campus drinking binges… a barroom brawl arrest (complete with a shirtless mug shot)… oversleeping the prestigious Manning football camp due to a drunken bender from the night before that was chronicled in photos all over the internet… ONE HALF game suspension for NCAA rules violation of selling his autograph as a student… chugging beer on live TV waiting to be drafted by the NFL… a marijuana possession arrest… flipping off the opposing sideline during an NFL preseason game WHILE he is playing in it. Yes sir, this young man for certain looks like the poster boy of good behavior. Why can’t Jameis Winston be more like THAT? Good thing that despite it all, the media still adores him. After all, Snickers certainly does, as he now has their endorsement.
johnny-manziel-flips-bird
Meanwhile, I think its fair to say if Jameis Winston so much as passes gas in public at this point, the NCAA is likely to make FSU vacate some wins.
What is truly interesting about all this is probably how much of an impact the media assault on Winston last week actually WORKED! FSU’s administration passed down a half game suspension for Winston cursing in public. Honestly, it was appropriate to suspend him, less because of the actual crime and more because the kid needs to stop thinking he can get away with everything Manziel did and rather needs to start holding himself to a higher standard. However, the media onslaught was so intense that the FSU upper brass caved in to the pressure from all the rumors and innuendo being peddled on TV and radio, following up with an extension of the suspension to a FULL GAME on Friday evening. The late night decision even had some speculating that there was “new information.” What folks would soon learn is that there wasn’t and didn’t need to be new information; the media had done their job and done it well enough to make the University think the transgression was worse than it sounded. Perhaps maybe the media didn’t do it as well as THEY would have liked though, because FSU won the game. And the media has been furious about it ever since. Their latest anger? That Winston had pads on while helping the team warm up BEFORE the game. No folks, we aren’t kidding. This is seriously how egregiously ridiculous this media-powered witch hunt has become.
To illustrate how powerful the media is in a case like this, let’s look at how the story broke last week. FSU students tweeted out what happened. Immediately the sharks in the media water pounced, contacting these students to get all the dirt. Then the media outlets released their stories. And the chest thumping outrage at ESPN and on radio shows around the nation soon after began! However as these poor eyewitness students were being thrown under the bus by the media, and outcast by some of their football crazy peers at FSU for their tweets, a funny thing was happening. The media was MAKING UP THEIR OWN DETAILS of the story and NOT telling the whole truth! And as you can see below, an original student eyewitness became just another a victim of the anti-Winston media propaganda machine…
KiefOsceolaTwitter
Interesting that a tiny blog site like ours knows more than over 90% of the media about this story, particularly the incorrect accusation that Winston “jumped up on a table” to yell his obscenities to the world as opposed to just happening to stumble upon a busy corridor while jesting with his pals. How did everyone miss this part of the story? Could it just be because all sports journalists are lazy hacks, or could it be that they NEEDED to make a bigger story out of this to achieve an end result? We need not look any further than last year’s false rape accusations against Winston and the media lies and omissions about THAT case to answer that question. (Source: http://secexposed.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/new-york-times-muck-rakes-fsu-as-media-takes-first-swipe-at-sec-threats/)
If FSU and their coaching staff can learn anything from this incident, it is that they need to keep their QB hidden and away from public interaction whatsoever until his time at FSU is complete. Jameis Winston, meanwhile, just needs a better group of friends. Folks that won’t “dare” him to say or do funny things, friends who will remind him when he is going a bit too far. He needs a good mentor… someone who can help him process what is truly right and wrong to do when you are in the public eye 24 hours a day. Jameis Winston is public enemy number 1 to ESPN and every SEC-obsessed media hack out there. They won’t rest until this kid goes down. Jameis needs to understand this and let it motivate him. More importantly, Jameis needs to begin taking notes about all the slander and libel going on around him and start planning legal action. The media sharks are going too far and they are threatening what could be a very exciting NFL career for this kid, making this a very reasonable defamation of character claim to be filed against everyone who has spoken or printed lies, lit up the airwaves with racial rants by attacking his African American vernacular, or spent hours on end insinuating he is a criminal or unintelligent.
Unfortunately for FSU, while this incident may have come to a close for them, the attacks on the program will not end until the Seminoles are out of the picture and out of the SEC’s way. That means when the media barrage fails, the NCAA will be the next jumping onto them to help finish the job. We’ve seen the pattern before against USC and Ohio State. When non-SEC teams get too big, the NCAA intervenes to adjust the playing field. Prepare for that next, FSU fans. We assure you, it will come.
We would also caution Oklahoma and Oregon to be on high alert as well. These SEC-driven sports media hitmen are gunning to seek and destroy the credibility of anyone standing in the way of their favorite conference to get full control of this four team playoff. That is why they have been so thick with their propaganda to show why the SEC is such a better conference, so that the committee will feel forced to ramrod two if not three SEC teams into that final four. (Source: http://secexposed.wordpress.com/2014/09/16/propaganda-parades-poll-collusion-and-playoff-committee-manipulation/)
The SEC came really close to eliminating one of their biggest “villains” after this most recent coordinated media attack last week. Too bad for them that they came up just short of accomplishing their goals. Rest assured folks, they aren’t done trying. Isn’t that right, Paul Finebaum?
You still mad, bro?"

Monday, September 22, 2014

Say No to Thrasher





Say no to Thrasher

 
“This is an important moment for Florida State University and its Board of Trustees, which is charged with selecting a new president from the finalists for the job.
More is at stake than who will lead the institution; this also is about what kind of place Florida State will become.
All indications suggest the trustees are ready to select former House speaker and current state Sen. John Thrasher, one-time chair of the state Republican Party who also chairs Gov. Rick Scott's election campaign committee.
The search committee meets Monday to decide if any of the four finalists do not deserve to be forwarded to the trustees, which meets Tuesday to pick FSU's next president.
The real question before the trustees begin is not with who, but what. That is, what is FSU really?
Is it simply a political prize to be awarded as spoils by victors in political elections? Let's be honest: Who believes Sen. Thrasher would be considered a serious candidate were someone besides Rick Scott the governor?
Does FSU's leader truly not need to embrace scientific principles or empirical evidence?
Will it simply be an athletic powerhouse, content to ride the laurels of football national championships?
Will it just be a slave to the cash flowing from corporate givers?
Or can it ever reach its potential as a top public university, doing important work to benefit the nation and humanity?
Sen. Thrasher has had a long and proud political career.
We mean no disrespect to Sen. Thrasher, nor to diminish his accomplishments. He is simply the wrong person for this job.
We know we may be whistling into the wind, but we urge the trustees to put aside their loyalty to Sen. Thrasher, who doesn't seem to be qualified on the basis of the job description.
We are bothered that as a potential president of a top-tier research institution, Sen. Thrasher could not even bring himself to divorce his political philosophy from the job he covets.
Asked about evolution, Sen. Thrasher talked about his religious beliefs, saying: "I have a great faith in my life that has guided me in my life in a lot of things I believe in." The implication is that science and faith cannot co-exist.
Sen. Thrasher also declined to give a specific answer when asked about the science behind climate change, and then threatened to walk out of the room when two students giggled at his answers, a clear signal of the senator's intolerance for disagreement.
Later, the senator said he was trying to send a message to the students, the message being he is not to be heckled, he said. The message seems to be clear: disagreement is not to be tolerated, let alone embraced, as must occur in academic life.
We have no doubt that should Sen. Thrasher be selected, life will go on at Florida State University. We also have no doubt that it will do so without some current members of the faculty, that some top-flight researchers may look elsewhere for work, as may students seeking a university dedicated to top academic and scientific standards.
There is no question that the selection of Sen. Thrasher would hurt the reputation of the university he professes to love. The job will have been won through the exercise of pure power politics, not a true vetting of the most qualified for the presidency.
We urge the trustees to truly think through the implications of what they are about to do.”



Note to Thrasher: Be nice, students are FSU lifeblood

“I’m not a mathematician. But I believe algebra exists.
Theologians say you can believe in God and believe in evolution.
Yet, in his candidate forum interview for FSU president, Republican State Senator John Thrasher said he couldn’t comment on global warming because he needed to know more about the topic. And he sidestepped a question about evolution saying his faith guides him. Both answers show a distressing ambivalence about science by a man who wants to lead a major research university.
But you know what was really distressing about Thrasher’s interview last week? The imperious way he treated students at his interview.
Early in the proceedings, a couple of students started laughing when Thrasher did not answer the question about global warming. Thrasher immediately bowed up, said “I will not be heckled” and threatened to leave. Later, he responded condescendingly to several student questions.
You can forgive Thrasher’s anti-science response, if only because they were sort of unfair questions. A university president won’t be called upon very often to defend evolution or prove global warming (though his faculty certainly will).
But a president does serve students. And if Thrasher doesn’t respect students, Houston, we have a problem.
Who knows which of the four candidates will be chosen FSU president? Thrasher is the apparent front-runner, despite the outstanding academic background and credentials of the other three candidates.
But a university is a house of learning, not simply a business. Students are a university’s family, not simply its customers. Even when they misbehave or annoy, students have to be respected as the mission of a university: There is no university without the students.
So whoever is chosen as president cannot disdain students. He or she has to have respect – hopefully even affection – for students.
You can’t expect the next FSU president to be an Edward Conradi – but he’s got to be at least a Stanley Marshall.
Edward Conradi served Florida State College for Women from 1909 to 1941 — the longest presidential term in FSU history. Presiding over an all-women’s school at a different time in history, Conradi was beloved. He was famous for stopping students on campus just to talk and for encouraging the women to pursue “the finer things in life.”
Stanley Marshall, who died earlier this year, was president from 1969 to 1977, presiding over an era of student protest. A conservative Republican – like Thrasher – Marshall was not beloved. But he was cordial.
Marshall could exert a heavy hand when he believed student protest threatened violence, such as the night he called out the Leon County Sheriff’s Department to shut down a meeting of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), creating the infamous Night of the Bayonets.
But in verbal confrontations, Marshall was almost always tolerant and polite. Whether protesters were occupying his office in Westcott, marching on his home on West Tennessee Street or massing on Landis Green, Marshall let them talk.
Marshall, a former college professor, understood a university president had a duty to let all voices be heard. Even when they mocked him.
“I know he was politically conservative and we had philosophical disagreements,” said famous student protester ‘Radical’ Jack Lieberman, upon Marshall’s death in June. “But on a personal level, he was always a gentleman. And I appreciated that.”
Certainly, college students can try one’s patience and sometimes require discipline. The repeated missteps of FSU football quarterback Jameis Winston are a case in point. To some, the students protesting Thrasher’s candidacy were annoying and deserved rebuke.
Students have held forums and marches and written angry letters. Several brought protest signs to the Thrasher interview at the Turnbull Center. They are not trying to be polite.
But Thrasher is a 70-year-old man with a long record of political actions. The students are young people just learning to judge the impacts of political actions. He wants to be president, they will be his constituents.
He’s got to be able to take a little heckling — especially simple laughter. If he thinks being a university president means never being ridiculed by students, he’s in for a surprise if hired.
Students shouldn’t run the university. Students shouldn’t pick the president. But they deserved to be on the selection committee, which had three students among its 27 members. The constituency should always be heard.
A Zinger last week snidely wrote: “I’m not sure why there are students on a university president search committee in the first place. Whose idea was that?”
It was the idea of fairness.
It was the idea of logic.
It was the idea of why universities exist.
They exist to be marketplaces of ideas and homes to many voices – from students to faculty to administrators.
If you’re not willing to hear those voices, you shouldn’t be president”



Power, influence and FSU

We’ve been watching this discussion of Florida State University’s presidency as a clash of politics and academia, but maybe it’s really a physics thing.
Never mind John Thrasher’s political power or academic credentials. Never mind those highbrow elitists who think college presidents ought to have “Ph.D.” after their names.
Remember the example of what happens when an irresistible force meets and immovable object? Take your pick which is which – Thrasher as an unstoppable force tilting at a solid ivory tower, or the education establishment as the juggernaut rolling over the unyielding object.
The St. Augustine state senator widely considered to have had a lock on the FSU presidency is not accustomed to hearing “no.” As a House member, Thrasher was speaker. As a senator, he rules the Rules Committee, which controls oxygen in the Senate chamber. He’s not just a Republican insider, he chaired the party, is a certified friend of Jeb Bush and heads Gov. Rick Scott’s re-election campaign.
The students and faculty members are not accustomed to being abruptly dismissed, either. They have shown up at meetings of the presidential search committee, and at Thrasher’s on-campus appearances, to protest that a bachelor’s degree and a law degree – even if they’re both from FSU – are not presidential timber.
Some alumni have even started a Facebook petition, threatening to withhold contributions if Thrasher gets the job. The students and faculty have soldiered on, although they believe the fix was in the day Eric Barron decamped for Penn State.
The search committee initially wanted to interview only Thrasher. There are now three other finalists, but many faculty and students remain convinced he could still get hired if, during his interview, he had jumped up on the table and shouted something quarterbacks find witty.
The protestors urged the committee to reconstitute itself, with one-third student membership, one-third faculty and one-third “outside” interests. However sincere their motives, the ill-fated motion showed a fairly naïve notion of how this thing works.
In their world, the contemplative life, the pursuit of academic excellence, scientific inquiry and learning itself are what matters. In Thrasher’s milieu, it’s about winning. Athough they’d never be so crass as to say it, the governor and legislators are the management of the State University System, faculty and staff are the employees and students are the customers.
To survive, every business must listen to its employees and customers, but not to the extent of giving up control of production.
In the Legislature, Thrasher’s party controls about 60 percent of the seats. That does not mean the Democrats get to pass 40 percent of the bills. It means the Republicans get to do whatever they want, which may or may not coincide with things the minority party supports.
The governor whose re-election campaign Thrasher is chairing is the man who championed $10,000 degrees at state colleges. He once said we don’t need to keep producing anthropologists, when the community colleges and universities could be preparing students to do something besides teaching what they just learned.
Get ‘em out, get ‘em jobs, and do it as economically as possible – that’s the Republican approach to education. It’s all right to have a couple oboes, some poetry and busts of funny-looking philosophers lying around, for those who like that sort of stuff, but you don’t let them slow down the assembly line.
Thrasher obviously has his supporters on campus and, if he gets the job, his detractors will get over it. He has already said he wants to improve faculty salaries – it’s hard to stay mad at a guy who can get the Legislature to do that – and even the most vociferous of his student critics will move on in a few years.
We’ve had politicians as university presidents before. Two of them, T.K. Wetherell and Sandy D’Alemberte, were at FSU. Two others, Frank Brogan at FAU and Betty Castor at USF, were elected education commissioners. John Delaney at North Florida was a former Jacksonville mayor.
All had more academic credentials than Thrasher, as protestors have frequently pointed out, but that’s not why they got the jobs. Everyone competing with them for those university presidencies had impressive sheepskins, too.
They won because, like Thrasher, they had the power and persuasiveness to win over a majority of the people making the decisions.
“Education is not a commodity” says the banner adopted by some of the student activists. Perhaps not on campus, but once you venture beyond Westcott Gate….”

FSU corruption gives FSU unqualified presidential candidate

info from the FSU search committee consultant:


Stakeholder survey results........

Thrasher -- 73% unqualified, 14% below average, 2% average, 2% good, 9% outstanding

Wheatly -- 70% outstanding, 21% good, 5% average, 3% below average, 1% unqualified

Martin -- 68% outstanding, 21% good, 4% average, 3% below average, 4% unqualified

Marchase -- 50% outstanding, 25% good, 15% average, 9% below average, 1% unqualified

Top college football ratings for Week 4


Top college football ratings for Week 4

"The SEC showdown between Alabama and Florida on Saturday afternoon drew a 5.1 rating for CBS, a 70% improvement over last year's matchup featuring the Gators and Tennessee according to sportsmediawatch.com.
The Tide-Gators matchup was the highest of the 2014 season, beating Florida State-Clemson on Saturday and the previous high of 4.6 for Southern California's upset of Stanford in week two. The SEC on CBS has earned ratings wins two consecutive weeks.
Top college football ratings for Week 4:
1. Florida-Alabama, CBS, 5.1
2. Florida State-Clemson, ABC, 4.9
3. Oklahoma-West Virginia, FOX, 1.9
4. Regional coverage, ABC, 1.7 "

FSU vs Clemson Locker Room Videos



Jimbo Life ain't fair

FSU Locker Room 1

FSU Locker Room 2

FSU Locker Room 3


Friday, September 19, 2014

ESPN & Jameis

Mark May, Brian Griese, and others have been ripping Jameis lately for stupid mistakes....and the kid has made them and deserves criticism.....but before folks treat him like a felon (which he has never even been charged with a crime), note this:



Brian Griese was arrested and charged with DUI on October 30, 2000







Marchase has what FSU needs



Marchase has what FSU needs

There is a heated and divisive search to fill the university president position at Florida State University. Some appear to be waging what almost amounts to a partisan political campaign. This political campaign is distracting everyone from what is the real decision: who is the most qualified person to lead FSU.
No one should be surprised that a partisan political candidate's application has drawn some partisan political responses. If former Gov. Charlie Crist were applying for the FSU presidency, I would be willing to bet that some conservatives would oppose him because of his currently liberal political views.
A search centered around politics conveniently favors State Sen. John Thrasher. If people are forced to join partisan camps, many people will come to Thrasher's defense because they don't want to see a fellow conservative attacked by liberals. This narrative likely plays well among FSU's Republican dominated board of trustees. The main benefit to Thrasher from this political discussion is that it is distracting everyone from his complete lack of qualifications to be president of FSU.
The overwhelming majority of the opposition among faculty, students, and alumni to Thrasher surrounds his lack of qualifications, not his politics. The faculty wanting an academic as president should come as a surprise to no one.
During the search that led to the hiring of T.K. Wetherell, the faculty senate passed a vote of no-confidence in the trustees when Wetherell, a former Democratic legislator, was the front runner because of his perceived lack of academic accomplishments. Wetherell had a doctoral degree and over 20 years of experience in college education.
Being university president is more than just a fundraising job. A university is a massive and diverse institution with a bureaucracy that requires seasoned leadership in order to make all its parts function well. This requires someone who gets things done to be a consensus builder. Given the divisive nature of Thrasher's candidacy, how long would it take him to become a consensus builder on campus? How long will it take him to raise money from disillusioned alumni who were not happy with his selection?
Yes, a university president does work with the legislature. However, one doesn't need to be a former legislator to be effective in this arena. It seems that any deficiencies that a university president might have in government relations could be solved pretty quickly by one of Tallahassee's many lobbying firms. John Hitt at UCF was not a legislator, but he had no difficulty hiring Thrasher to lobby for UCF to get a medical school. Thrasher achieved this for them, even while serving on FSU's board of trustees.
Research and prestige are two key components that drive success at universities. There are three candidates with proven research credentials who have applied and then there is Mr. Thrasher. What value can he add to research at FSU? How will he add prestige in the academic world to FSU? According to search consultant Alberto Pimentel, Thrasher is someone who would not be interviewed, let alone hired as president at any institution outside of Florida. To think of it another way, would Google hire someone as president that Apple or Yahoo wouldn't interview? The answer is a resounding no and it would be a terrible decision for FSU to hire someone with a worse resume than any top 50 public university president.
Fortunately for FSU, there are very qualified candidates for the university to choose from. In my opinion, the clear top choice among that group is Richard Marchase. Marchase has excellent academic credentials and has demonstrated experience and success in all of the areas that FSU has identified necessary of its next president. I have written to the board of trustees to encourage his hiring and hope others would do so as well.
For FSU to achieve its goal of becoming a top 25 public university, it needs an experienced president who can unite the FSU community to advance forward.
Hoyt L. Prindle III is a 2007 graduate of Florida State University. Contact him at hoyt@fbdc.net”

Thursday, September 18, 2014

City Commission to consider expansion of downtown district boundaries



City Commission to consider expansion of downtown district boundaries

"
The urban district administered by the Tallahassee Downtown Improvement Authority could more than double in size under a boundary expansion that the Tallahassee City Commission will consider today.

Established in 1971, the special assessment district's boundaries have remained unchanged since that time, extending from Tennessee Street south to Pensacola Street and from Gadsden Street west to Bronough Street.

But the changing real estate picture and new public and private investment south of that original zone prompted local leaders to revisit the boundary issue and adjust with the times.

The city commission will decide today whether to have staff draft an ordinance to expand the downtown improvement area's boundaries and return it for public hearings in October.

Jay Revell, executive director of the TDIA, says it's only taken a few years for such projects as the Franklin Boulevard improvements, the completion of Cascades Park and the infrastructure work on Gaines Street and subsequent private development there to reshape the area.


https://html1-f.scribdassets.com/xphytnfcw414ttl/images/1-d7502f8dfa.png

 
"I think, and my board believes, that those projects established sort of a new definition of downtown," Revell said. He thinks the next wave of development in the downtown area is going to occur on the east end of Gaines Street and toward the park.

Also a part of the mix is Florida State University's plans for upgrades to the Civic Center, some of which are already taking place. The FSU concept known as the Madison Mile is a corridor of housing, commercial and entertainment development stretching from the civic center west to Doak Campbell Stadium.

There are plans for building a convention hotel on the civic center property and development of five unoccupied blocks along Madison Street east of Macomb Street. FSU's College of Business will be relocating there, too.

Each commercial property in the district pays an additional increment of property tax to support the Downtown Improvement Authority's efforts to market the district, promote its events and sponsor activities that bring people downtown.

The city's Office of Budget and Policy performed a financial impact analysis of the proposed expansion and found that there is no immediate or future negative financial impact to the city of Tallahassee. The TDIA also did a survey in 2012 of property owners and received "an overwhelmingly positive response" to expanding the district, according to the city.

In addition, city staff determined that the proposed expansion would create no new taxes because the additional properties are all nontaxable.

Revell says the TDIA expects the civic center, the park and the activity on Gaines Street to be economic drivers that will increase the appeal of living and working downtown. The authority's role is to advocate for smart development there and market those downtown attributes.

"The more people that are in this area, who spend their lives and their dollars in this area, the better off everybody will be," Revell added."

FSU Law, Med schools top 10 for Hispanics


FSU Law, Med schools top 10 for Hispanics

"FSU's College of Law, above, was ranked among the nation's top 10 for Hispanic students by Hispanic Business. / Rache Melnicki/FSU

According to Hispanic Business’ latest rankings, Florida State University’s colleges of law and medicine are ranked within the top 10 in the nation for Hispanics.

The schools are ranked based on several criteria, such as the ratio of Hispanics as part of the total enrollment of the college, the ratio of full-time Hispanic faculty, the school’s reputation, and their use of progressive programs intended to support, recruit, advise, and mentor the Hispanic student population.

Falling second only to Florida International University’s College of Law, FSU’s law school secured its spot at number two among the nation’s top law schools. It is also the 11th year in a row that FSU’s College of Law is named within the top 10 law schools for Hispanics. In 2013, 8.9 percent of the College of Law’s enrollment was composed of Hispanics, and Hispanics received 28 of the 251 law degrees—over 11 percent—of those awarded to the Class of 2013. Out of the college’s full-time faculty, 13.3 percent was Hispanic, the second highest Hispanic enrollment, falling short only only to FIU’s 22.7 percent full-time Hispanic faculty members.

“We are all thrilled to once again be named in the Hispanic Business’ Top 10,” said College of Law Dean Donald J. Weidner. “Our community as a whole is enriched by the Hispanic and Latino dimensions of our students, faculty, staff and alumni.”

With 10 out of the 113 M.D. degrees earned in 2013, Florida State’s College of Medicine secured the eighth spot on Hispanic Business’s list of top medical schools for Hispanics in the nation. In 2013, the Hispanic enrollment at the College of Medicine made up 11.3 percent of the total graduate enrollment. The college’s full-time faculty was also made up of 3.8 percent Hispanics.

“This is a great credit to our admissions committee and staff, who work hard to identify incredible students who fit our mission,” said College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty. “Students who come here find a welcoming and supportive atmosphere and a sense of family for all students, regardless of race or ethnic origin. We are proud of our success and pleased to be acknowledged once again as a top medical school by Hispanic Business.”

The continued efforts of both the staff and the faculty of the Colleges of Law and Medicine have been recognized by Hispanic Business and both deans expressed the significant importance of this recognition.

Hispanic Business is a media company that publishes business and political news stories oriented toward Hispanic professionals and entrepreneurs. It focuses on growth in the U.S. Hispanic market, economic trends, diversity and philanthropy, supply-chain development, best business practices, and career development opportunities all centered on the Latino community. Hispanic Business has gained a projected readership of about 1 million."

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Pic of the Day

Embedded image permalink

John Thrasher's secret lobbying dilemma



John Thrasher's secret lobbying dilemma

"There's no question that the decision by powerful State Sen. John Thrasher to seek the presidency of Florida State University has created a bit of a controversy especially among some members of the faculty and students. A lot of the debate has centered on Thrasher's political career where he has been a loyal Republican who has also been willing to cross swords with unions and public school teachers. Thrasher has also had a dramatic role in the reshaping of higher education in Florida. At a restaurant meeting in Orlando with then-Gov. Jeb Bush it was then-House Speaker Thrasher who drew up on a napkin the plan to dissolve the statewide Board of Regents and replace it with local boards of trustees at each state university. It was the regents who at the time had thwarted at least initially plans to bring a medical school to FSU. (The plan was carried out, only to have part of it rolled back by a constitutional amendment creating the current Board of Governors.) The big argument that supporters of Thrasher - including local political heavyweights such as former Sen. Al Lawson - is that Thrasher's presidency will help FSU in its quest to attain additional financial support in the halls of the state Capitol. There is an overriding belief that FSU's bid to push itself into the top ranks of American research universities cannot be achieved without an increase in state money. One FSU professor speaking last week to the the presidential search committee lauded FSU alumnus Thrasher as a "successful and passionate" advocate for the school who could help bring in the added money to bolster faculty salaries and build the school's infrastructure. There's an argument that can be made that the fractious nature of the Legislature - combined with a chief executive now in power who has made it clear that he wants universities to spend less not more - means that even someone with tremendous political capital could have difficulty achieving some sort of major windfall from the state. But there's a more simple dilemma to deal with: John Thrasher can't really lobby the Legislature. At least not for the next two years. Florida's ethics laws, as they have been interpreted by the state's Ethics Commission, make it clear that Thrasher can only have a limited engagement with state legislators. The commission has dealt with the issue several times, but most recently in 2009 with the hiring of former State Rep. Joe Pickens as a college president. The commission has taken the position that Florida's Constitution does not allow a former legislator to lobby the Legislature even if it is viewed in the capacity of a public service position. The argument is that the prohibition applies to a higher education position because the goal of the two-year ban is to make sure that legislators do not take actions designed to help them attain the future job. (Just this past session as Thrasher was considering whether to apply for the job he pushed to split up FSU's joint engineering college with Florida A&M University.) From that opinion: While we have no doubt that the former member here, like the members at issue in CEO 00-7 and CEO 00-18, is merely furthering a career of service to the public, it is clear to us that neither "opportunities for personal profit through lobbying after leaving the Legislature" nor the potential for influence peddling or the appearance thereof, are exclusive to situations where the employment held after legislative service involves lobbying for private entities. In the context of conflicts of interests we have often said that the prohibition does not hinge on the personal integrity of the individual, but is rather is prophylactic in nature. CEO 81-76, CEO 97-15. The same is true here; the prohibitions of Article II, Section 8(e) and Section 112.313(9) are clearly and directly stated, and are designed as preventive measures. As we said in CEO 81-57, "the provision seeks to preserve the integrity of the legislative process by ensuring that decisions of members of the Legislature will not be made out of regard for possible employment as lobbyists. Since legislative decisions affect those in the public sector as well as those in the private sector, it would seem to be equally important that legislative decisions not be colored by regard for future lobbying opportunities in behalf of public entities." For these reasons we recede from our opinions in CEO 00-7 and CEO 00-18, and return to our position, stated in CEO 81-57 and CEO 90-4, that former members are prohibited from representing, for compensation, another person or entity, be it public or private, before the Legislature for a period of two years following their leaving office." To be clear - this doesn't mean that a university president can't talk to the Legislature. A legislative committee chairman could indeed "invite" Thrasher to appear before them to discuss issues, including funding issues. But it does mean that there are limits on Thrasher's ability to independently seek out and ask legislators for help during the frenzied 60-day period when legislators work late into the night hammering out a state budget. Now in case you are wondering. Thrasher is aware of the commission decision. As is FSU'S general counsel. As is FSU Board of Trustees chairman Allan Bense. It's just something that so far has not received a lot of public discussion so far. When asked about it last week, Thrasher insisted it would not be an issue, especially since he is not the main lobbyist for the university. "I don't think it's a real problem for us given the staff we have, given the few times presidents actually go over to the Capitol,'' Thrasher said. "They are going to know what we want. Trust me." But what's also interesting is that it was Thrasher himself who wanted to go even further than what is in existing law. Two years ago it was Thrasher who sponsored a bill (SB 1560) that would have barred him from even seeking the presidency in the first place. The ethics bill stated that legislators could not work for state universities or colleges while in the Legislature or go to work for them for up to two years following their departure. The bill wound up dying in a Senate committee. Thrasher is a "non traditional" candidate. Even the search consultant assisting FSU acknowledged that Thrasher would not be considered for a top post like this outside of the state of Florida. It's Thrasher's connections and clout in Tallahassee that make him a candidate worth considering, the consultant said. The question, however, is whether the presidential search committee and FSU's board has a full discussion on what the 70-year-old Thrasher can achieve during the first two years that the lobbying ban is in effect.                                                          "

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Free Speech, Due Process, and the Presidency at FSU: A Reply to Barney Bishop, etc


Free Speech, Due Process, and the Presidency at FSU: A Reply to Barney Bishop

"No one’s perfect, least of all university professors -- at least I speak for myself. We do our best daily to encourage students to speak their minds, write and create well, and think critically. When we fail, we try again. Independent thought, evaluation of evidence, and open discussion are the core of our profession.

So, when Alberto Pimentel, managing partner at the firm conducting Florida State University’s presidential search, claimed that one of the current four candidates “would not be a viable candidate in any other state,” the remark caused concern and for good reason.
  
FSU now faces three urgent challenges to its national standing: (1) It seeks membership in the Association of American Universities, a nonprofit organization of 62 leading universities in the United States and Canada. (2) Its athletic program has attracted national scrutiny due to situations with which we are all familiar. And (3) it has fallen from 40th to 43rd in the US News rankings of national public universities.

Reasonable people may differ about which of the four candidates under consideration for the FSU presidency can best meet these challenges.

The FSU Faculty Senate and its resolutions are one way that FSU faculty members express their opinions within the larger FSU community. The Senate’s resolution of Sept. 10 was an expression of the Senate’s concerns -- no more, no less -- hardly a personal, partisan, or political attack.

Universities operate through open discussion. The process of peer review is central to faculty hiring, annual review, promotion, and tenure decisions. Faculty members depend on criticism from colleagues to improve their research and teaching. When we give professional talks or submit research manuscripts to academic journals, we expect to receive criticism that will improve our writing. What may look like an “attack” in the Sept. 10 resolution is, in a university setting, “business as usual.”

By that token, faculty is an extremely conservative bunch. We aim to preserve an environment for the free exchange of ideas that is part of a long academic tradition. We uphold and defend an environment in which neither money, nor popularity, nor political affiliation determine the worth of ideas.

From this point of view, the best reason to choose one candidate over others as FSU’s next president is that the final choice has emerged under scrutiny by the university’s various stakeholders in open, public discussion. There is nothing personal, uncivil, or unprofessional about this process. In a democracy, and under our Constitution, free deliberation is an eminently conservative, deeply American value.

The time for public debate is now. After the final selection of a new president, FSU’s faculty will greet it with the utmost professionalism, regardless of the choice. Collegiality, collaboration, and mutual respect, despite differences, are the other values that faculty hold dear.

This week, FSU and the public will hear from all four current presidential candidates who, together, possess a surplus of nationally recognized talent. We can hope that the discussion will remain free and open in the spirit of the great, national, public university that FSU is and aims to become.


(Editor's note: This column is in response to Barney Bishop's Sept. 11 column in Sunshine State News, "Ivory Tower Professors' Opposition to John Thrasher Is Why He Must Be FSU’s Next President").



Joseph Hellweg is an associate professor in the Department of Religion at Florida State University. His research is on religion and performance in West Africa. He is a recipient of two Fulbright Fellowships and a 2014 recipient of the Developing Scholar Award at FSU."


Thrasher heckled during mostly civil interview for FSU president

"Hundreds of students, faculty and staff came out Monday directing pointed questions to Sen. John Thrasher, an influential political figure who is the lone non-academic finalist for the job of Florida State University president.

During on-campus forums that are part of the presidential selection process, students and faculty often expressed a lack of trust in Thrasher, long considered the front runner for the university job.

During his long political career, Thrasher has steered millions of state dollars to the university and helped create the FSU medical school, but he also has recorded numerous votes that have been opposed by teachers and unions.
Thrasher, at one point Monday, threatened to walk out due to heckling.
Some faculty called Thrasher's responses "vacuous."
"He's saying that nothing in the past matters regarding his votes, but he keeps mentioning his (legislative) funding for the medical school," said Michael Buchler, associate professor of music theory. "He can't have it both ways."
Still, the series of forums, while at times testy, were predominantly civil and also included support from faculty and students.
"Talking to people helps. They realize I don't have horns," Thrasher, a St. Augustine Republican, said during a break between groups. "I am who I am, and I think they're beginning to understand that."
Thrasher, the first of four finalists to take part in the campus forums this week, spoke of his love for the school and his plans for advocacy if he is offered the presidency by the university's Board of Trustees next week.
Thrasher, a former House speaker who is chairman of Gov. Rick Scott's re-election campaign, also assured faculty there would be no retribution against his alma mater in the upcoming legislative session if he fails to get the presidency.
"Nothing bad is going to happen to Florida State University," said Thrasher, an avowed FSU "homer" who received his undergraduate and law degrees from the Tallahassee school.
"I think more good can happen if I become president. I mean that in all sincerity and with great humility," Thrasher continued. "I really believe that we can make a difference, quite frankly, in the public sector and private sector, to make a difference financially for this university."
Still, at one point Thrasher threatened to walk out due to heckling from a small group, mostly graduate assistant students, seated in the front during the faculty forum, while he was acknowledging a need to learn more about climate change.
"If I'm going to get heckled from the front row, by people laughing and making jokes about it, then I'm not going to stay. I don't think it's fair to you and me," Thrasher said, breaking from his response regarding climate change.
Thrasher later said he "just wanted to get their attention" and that after his comment the individuals behaved.
Thrasher talked to three groups — university staff, faculty and students — before a community reception was held, all in the school's Augustus B. Turnbull III Florida State Conference Center.
Thrasher is seeking to succeed former President Eric Barron, an academic with a track record in fundraising who was named president of Penn State University in February.
Michele G. Wheatly, who until June had been provost at West Virginia University, will go through the review process on Tuesday.
Colorado State University System Chancellor Michael V. Martin is scheduled for Wednesday.
The fourth finalist, Richard B. Marchase, University of Alabama at Birmingham vice president for research and economic development, is set to appear Friday.
Using feedback from the forums, the university's 27-member Presidential Search Advisory Committee is scheduled Sept. 22 to make a recommendation to the university's trustees.
The trustees, who would still have to forward the final choice to the university system's Board of Governors, are scheduled to meet Sept. 23.
Thrasher faced questions about issues such as how he would increase diversity on campus, his lack of academic credentials, his legislative support for prison privatization, his support of a proposal that would have moved toward splitting the Florida A&M University-FSU College of Engineering and his continued desire for the job despite the student and faculty opposition.
Some of the students see Thrasher as an extension of the politically influential Koch brothers, whose foundation since 2008 has helped fund the FSU economics department.
The billionaire brothers draw distain from some students for their support for conservative endeavors and for what is seen as the foundation's influence over the curriculum and hiring of professors.
Faculty questioned Thrasher about his support for a bill (HB 115) signed into law this year that allows university direct-support organization boards to meet in private when they discuss donors or potential donors, proposals for research funding or plans for initiating or supporting research.
Thrasher told faculty members that while he voted for the bill, university contributions "should come with no strings attached."
Sitting in a chair before about 100 members of the FSU staff in the morning, nearly 200 faculty and later about 150 students, Thrasher acknowledged his law degree from the school may not be the academic credentials desired by many of the faculty. But he said there would be no stronger advocate for the school, its faculty and students. More importantly, he indicated that through his extensive legislative and lobbying experience, he would be able to complete the $1 billion fundraising goal set by Barron in 2013.
"I know how to do it, I know how to get things accomplished," Thrasher said."

John Thrasher isn't the first politician to flirt with FSU



John Thrasher isn't the first politician to flirt with FSU

"They're trying to find a new president to run Florida State University, and darned if the whole thing hasn't gotten political. If I had to pick a turning point, I'd go with 1993.
In other words, the argument itself is not a new one.
Academic credentials or political connections?
Back in '93, the Board of Regents went with the politician, and Sandy D'Alemberte performed to pretty rave reviews. Nine years later, FSU chose another former politician, and T.K. Wetherell also had an admirable run in the president's office.
So, 20 years later, shouldn't the argument be moot?
Yes and no.
Yes, state Sen. John Thrasher's political career should not preclude him from the job. No, his political cronies shouldn't hand him the desk after a charade of a search.
This is where we are today. With Thrasher's supporters claiming he is the victim of a political witch hunt, and his critics claiming he is the beneficiary of a rigged process.
Strangely enough, I think they're both correct.
It was suggested by a member of FSU's Presidential Search Advisory Committee in a Tallahassee Democrat op-ed piece that resistance is based on liberals in the academic community having a problem with Thrasher's conservative political views.
Tallahassee businessman DeVoe Moore wrote that he did not see similar protests when D'Alemberte and Wetherell, both former Democratic legislators, were seeking FSU's presidency.
Moore has a point. I'm guessing Thrasher's politics have something to do with the tenor and breadth of protests, including the childish tittering when he was answering questions about climate change during a public interview on Monday.
But to claim this is a liberal conspiracy leaves out some important details.
First of all, the FSU search committee struck the first blow by trying to rig the process. The presidency was practically handed to Thrasher months ago until concerned voices on campus got involved. And while there were insinuations that Wetherell and D'Alemberte also had inside tracks on the job, it was never as blatant as this time around.
In fact, it's worth pointing out FSU's faculty did not support D'Alemberte's hiring. And when it came to Wetherell's candidacy, the faculty asked the head of the search committee (a certain John Thrasher) to recuse himself because he and Wetherell worked for the same lobbying firm.
Or course, there is also the matter of credentials. D'Alemberte and Wetherell were viewed as political candidates, but both had academic backgrounds.
D'Alemberte was a former law professor (for nine years) and law school dean (for five years) at FSU. Wetherell was a former vice president at Daytona Beach Community College and the president at Tallahassee Community College.
Thrasher's resume, while impressive, does not have the same higher ed experience.
So how will it turn out?
Well, it helps to know that the majority of the members on the search committee come from the corporate or political world. And it probably helps to know that Thrasher is running Gov. Rick Scott's re-election campaign, and that Board of Trustees chairman Allan Bense was appointed to his position by the governor.
So will Thrasher's politics play a role in the decision?
Naaaaah."

Monday, September 15, 2014

Don’t let FSU become another Penn State

Not a fan of the writer, but article has some valid points.

Don’t let FSU become another Penn State

"Two years ago, a Florida state senator introduced a bill “to halt the revolving door between the Legislature and state universities” and bar lawmakers from running to jobs at colleges they fund. He explained to the Florida Times-Union that “even in cases where lawmakers are doing everything ethically,” such a relationship could raise “red flags,” adding: “It brings up an awkward situation when they have to do something like vote for the budget.”
That man is still in the Florida Senate. He is John Thrasher, Senate president, former Republican Party of Florida chairman, and current chair of Rick Scott’s re-election campaign. And now he wants to run Florida State University.
He will run Florida State University, despite his hypocrisy, despite the damage he’s done to higher education in the state, despite his ethical lapses and the unsavory company he keeps in Tallahassee, because the selection process for a university president is gamed in his favor. A foregone conclusion. Window dressing for politicians and deep-pocketed donors, and special interests that care less about FSU’s education and research mission than keeping a well-oiled commerce and lobbying system going for a few lucky friends.
The stacked presidential search process started with one “candidate,” John Thrasher. When the university community called shenanigans, the politically connected search committee expanded its field to 10 eminently qualified, academically credentialed educators … and John Thrasher. This week, the search committee whittled that list down to three experienced lifelong professors, department chairs, school deans … and John Thrasher.
Despite the overwhelming opposition to him on the search committee’s own comment board from hundreds of faculty, students, staff, and community members, he moves on. Despite the Faculty Senate’s opposition to his candidacy, the fix is in. Any of the three amazing candidates who have graciously, courageously stuck with the process this long would make a fine captain to helm FSU. But ultimately, it will be John Thrasher, as it was preordained.
I’ve covered some of Thrasher’s questionable relationships before, and the reasons he’s all wrong for this job. But here’s just another little taste of the experience he brings to FSU:
–Thrasher has voted, on multiple occasions, to cut Florida’s higher-education budget by hundreds of millions of dollars, including one cut that occasioned FSU to put 50 faculty members on the chopping block.
–He was a registered lobbyist for a group that killed a bill to close tax loopholes for out-of-state businesses that would have brought nearly half a billion dollars to state universities.
–He’s fought tenure, the cornerstone of academic freedom.
–He’s violated state ethics laws twice — that we know of.
–He’s running the campaign of a governor who wants to financially penalize FSU students who don’t major in the disciplines he thinks are valuable — and who equates value with profitability for private industry.
–He has a reputation for being ill-tempered and intimidating even to his peers.
Oh, sure, he has had support from a few students, like the four FSU seniors who launched a “support John Thrasher” website on Wednesday night, and took extraordinary measures to cover up who’s paying for it.
All four are officers of the small but disproportionately influential Greek fraternity system at Florida State. One is a legislative intern who worked with Thrasher in Tallahassee. One is an officer of the Seminole Boosters, a half-billion-dollar organization whose generous support for FSU runs from A to B, if B stands for Bigtime Football. Its commercial interests and influence often run counter to the academic, research, and professional aspirations of the university.
One is the president of Pi Kappa Alpha, a very politically connected frat. At the FSU Pike house, there’s a plaque dedicated to Harry Sargeant III, calling him “the most powerful man no one knows.” Sargeant, a big Pike and FSU football supporter, is a Republican fundraiser in Thrasher’s inner circle who even ran finance for the state GOP — the same party Thrasher ran. The Pentagon says Sargeant overcharged Uncle Sam by as much as $200 million to transport oil for the troops in Iraq. He’s currently under a DOJ investigation for bribing foreign officials with millions in connection with that scheme. And Sargeant has long denied reports that prostitutes join him on Caribbean retreats he organizes with fellow high-ranking Florida Republicans and fraternity brothers.
These are the kinds of “friends” and admirers who fill Thrasher’s Rolodex. You’d be hard-pressed to find any such folks anywhere near the three bona-fide professors and university administrators competing with him for the FSU job.
I know Thrasher likes FSU, or at least the parts of FSU that like him — the Greek scene, the athletics scene, the boosters. These are cultures to be proud of at Florida State, but they are not the end-all be-all of the university. At times in recent years, their influence has grown out of hand, and the entire FSU community’s reputation has suffered as a result of some bad-faith action over there.
For their sake, and for the sake of education and research, they shouldn’t be given the keys to the kingdom, or a king who will be at their beck and call. There is a vibrant role for them, and for Thrasher, to play in the FSU community. But it’s not in the president’s office.
What has been missed in all these political machinations is the unique opportunity for an already-great university to become a world-renowned institution, whose faculty and research enlighten not just Floridians, or Americans, but the whole of humanity. It would be a shame to squander that opportunity and further burden the university with the reputation for provincialism and corruption that already plagues Tallahassee and Florida politics. The kind of provincialism and corruption that not only erodes a learning institution’s mission, but enables bigger crimes.
Through all this, the single biggest obstacle to Florida State’s continued greatness is the rush to anoint Thrasher — and to install an ethically challenged culture, focused on the home team and favors for friends and secretive dealings instead of academics and integrity. This university could be the next Harvard of the South. But the presidential search committee seems determined to make it the next Penn State."

Doak Campbell Stadium Renovation



Doak Campbell Stadium Renovation


FSU Club Seats

Pic of the Day

View image on Twitter

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Burt "Buddy" Reynolds & FSU in depth (and uniforms)



Burt "Buddy" Reynolds & FSU in depth (and uniforms)



"Like many of my generation, I grew up loving the Bandit and other Burt characters in movies, but never had the proper appreciation for what he meant to FSU and the football program. I used to live just hundreds of feet away from his dorm Hall and had friends living there and even then didn't know how much he gave until I read the story below from our Boosters. I always love learning more about our program and it seems with each story I hear, the more love and appreciation I gain for our program and this is one of the best ones ever.

Even if you don't read the whole thing, I hope you will at least glance at the bold parts to gain an idea of how much he is connected and meant to us if you didn't already know.

I wonder if Burt was consulted at all about the uniform changes and if not, I wish he could have been given what he has given to FSU since he has been such a large part of our traditions for so long, helped design and buy our golden pants of the 90's and he and Bobby designed the spears on our helmets.

How long has he been with the TV show? He was instrumental in our uniforms before, would only seem logical we got his opinion once again. Even Lee Corso for that matter.

Here is a fun tidbit from FSU boosters and below I linked a video showing Reynolds' role with our team uniforms below and moving away from the mustard yellow.

Link:
Question:  "What's the deal with Burt Reynolds?" This question comes from many angles, and the corollaries are along the lines of "Was he really a football star, or even really on the team?"  "What is Burt's real relationship with Florida State?"  "Is he actually involved with the University?"  "What kind of guy is he?"




My answer:   Burt Reynolds is one of the best guys ever.  Much better even than you think.  If Bobby Bowden's professional life is the story of Seminole football's ascent to greatness, then Burt Reynolds' is the story of the maturing of our alumni, and of their passion and lifelong commitment to FSU.


Our fans and alumni know that Burt is an actor and an alumnus who has been involved with the University.  Most have little idea who the man really is, and to what extent his life reflects all that is good and noble about FSU. Burton "Buddy" Reynolds was a highly recruited high school star from West Palm who committed informally to Miami, but was turned toward FSU by Seminole Coach Tom Nugent.  Another man who influenced his decision was his close friend from high school, a Seminole baseball player named Dick Howser.  Nugent jested with the young Reynolds that FSU wanted him so bad they had named a freshman girls' dorm on campus in his honor.  "Reynolds Hall - my own dorm filled with beautiful women!" he says smiling at the memory.






Nugent was in his second season as the Seminole Head Coach, and FSU was quickly upgrading its schedule to that of a major college program.  Our little Seminole team was truly a David against the Goliaths of the SEC and Coach Nugent
knew the Tribe needed a serious upgrade in talent.  His recruiting of halfback Buddy Reynolds and quarterback Lee Corso was part of that project.

Decades later, the smiling, graying men of that era still proudly refer themselves "Nugent's Boys".  The Boys went 8-3 that year against very tough competition, and in fact Nugent's innovative passing offense set what was then a national record for the number of touchdown passes in one season with nineteen.

Burt was a star from the first day he arrived on campus.  He bypassed the freshman team directly to be made a member of the varsity and a starter.  In recording a bitter loss to Auburn, the FSU yearbook Tally Ho described, "Freshman left halfback Buddy Reynolds almost turned the trick for the Seminoles in the third quarter.  He broke through left tackle and dashed for 54 yards."  Unfortunately, as he crossed the goal line Burt was knocked cold by Tiger defensive back and future Alabama governor Fob James.






Spring came to Tallahassee. One day in practice Burt went up to catch a ball and came down awkward on his knee.  As simple as that, his football career was finished.  Oh, he tried to re-habilitate, made an attempt to come back later, but the intricacies of knees were still mysteries in that earlier day.  It was over.

He told me once, "If I hadn't busted my knee I'd be a high school football coach in West Palm today."  He sounded as if that would have been a fine outcome as far as he's concerned.  He is and was a man at peace with himself.



Those who've seen his movies know Reynolds is clever.  Few realize that he is such a devoted academic and intellectual.  As Coach Bowden's assistant through all of the 1980s and 1990s Sue Hall developed a close relationship with Reynolds.  "You would not believe the size of his personal library," she says.  "Entire walls of shelves of books.  It's not unusual for him to read a book a day.  Every night he falls asleep listening to books on tape, but don't ask me how I know that," she laughs.






And what feeds that voracious appetite?  History, art, architecture, social commentary, the classics. "Burt told me he acquired his appreciation of fine art and literature from his close friend Dinah Shore," Sue says.  "He has an amazing mind. I've been fortunate to be on movie sets while he's working.  He reads the script at night, memorizes it, and knows it cold the next day.  I've never seen him ask for a prompter.  He's modest about it; says it's all due to the training, but I've never seen anyone who could absorb that amount of material that fast.  He is an extremely gifted man in terms of his intellect."



Reynolds tries to come to at least one game a year, usually watching from Bobby Bowden's private office where he can see the action unfold and then watch the replays on TV.  "He's a real student of the game," Hall says.  "I always try to send him media guides at the beginning of each season.  He never needs a script for the Great Moments segments.  He remembers just about everything that has ever happened in Seminole football."






Joel Padgett believes that Reynolds was the first Hollywood star to aggressively promote his alma mater in film.  If you'll think about it, he really is still the only one who does that to any extent.  Hall remembers, "We used to send him boxes and boxes of stuff all the time.  He wanted something in every movie.  It might be coffee cups on the desk, or waste baskets or game jerseys or sweatshirts; anything with FSU on it got crowded into the set.  We just cleaned out the office whenever Burt called."






And it wasn't just FSU jerseys and sweatshirts that popped up across the landscape of Reynolds' signature series of movies. Reynolds once had his pal, actor Dom DeLuise, play a character named Doctor Victor PrinziVic Prinzi of course was Florida State's long time radio commentator, partner to Gene Deckerhoff.  Prinzi was also one of Nugent's Boys, and Burt's quarterback.

Hall recalls the Bobby Bowden episode of Reynolds' hit TV series Evening Shade.  "It got a lot more involved with television.  I had to go find Tommy Wright here on campus and get notarized permission for Burt to use the FSU Fight Song." Reynolds' relationship with Bowden goes deeper than many realize.  "Coach Bowden and Burt talk a lot about religion," Sue says.  "I get the impression that Burt…" she searches for the right words, "used to have a reputation for enjoying parties…"  She believes that Bowden's close relationship has made a substantial difference in Reynolds' spiritual life.

Bowden has mentioned that he and Reynolds designed the arrow helmet together. Monk Bonasorte was an FSU safety and All-American who now directs the fabulously successful Varsity Club program.  "Back in 1979 when I played, our uniforms were actually in kind of poor condition.  They were patched up because uniforms were expensive and the school didn't have a lot of money," he says.  "Burt bought the first set of gold pants - they were actually called Notre Dame gold.

It was the first time we'd had new uniforms in awhile.Reynolds bought the first set of all-garnet uniforms too, and had some of his Hollywood pals tweak the design.






Monk is close to Reynolds now.  He describes Burt as unfailingly charming, a splendid looking man.  He still has quite a bit of The Bandit in his smile, but once in awhile you can also see those dangerous eyes from his character in Deliverance.  "He's a complicated guy," says Monk, "but he's the best." Yes, the best.






Had Reynolds not been such a great football player out of high school, he and Bobby Bowden might have met sooner.  The talented Reynolds bypassed FSU's freshman team entirely.  In those days the freshman squad plus walk-ons and whoever else could fill in from the varsity played its own schedule of games.  One of their regular opponents was South Georgia Junior College in Douglas, a team whose new 24-year-old Head Coach was also required by the school to drive the team bus and to coach basketball as well.  But it was not time yet for Bowden and Reynolds to cross paths.






I first met him in 1987 at the lavish Seminole Booster "Bernie & The Bandit" production enjoyed by the thousands of fans who crowded into the Tucker Center the Friday before the first home game.  Burt brought some pals with him, including actors Dom DeLuise, Bernie Casey and Ricardo Montalban to be his guests at the official dedication of Burt Reynolds Hall.

It was a heady time for the Seminoles and although we didn't realize it, it was the first game of the first season of the fourteen year Dynasty.  But as I watched I also remembered the Baylor game back in 1974, a miserable night in a miserable season in which FSU defeated only one opponent: the hapless Miami Hurricanes.  We played Baylor at home in October.

"The Longest Yard" had been released in the summer was a huge hit, and Burt Reynolds was in Tallahassee to watch the game. He was introduced to the wildly enthusiastic crowd, standing at mid-field with his friend, the gigantic Richard Keil another actor in the movie.

Burt Reynolds was pretty much all we had in those days.  I don't think anyone knew at the time how important it was to Burt that he had us as well.  This past fall, Reynolds was again introduced to the crowd in Doak Campbell Stadium, this 2004 collection of Seminole fans somewhat larger than the one thirty years ago.  Once again, he brought fellow actors with him including the gigantic fellow who plays the old Richard Keil character in this current remake of "The Longest Yard."





At that 1987 meeting we discussed the details of the weekend, including the dramatic pre-game surprise where Reynolds would throw the flaming spear into the turf.  I was impressed with his size; he's big.  For some reason most Hollywood actors tend to be on the small side. Reynolds looked more like a bodyguard or stunt man than an actor.  You can see the athlete.

He made quite a show of it.  Chief Osceola handed him the burning spear at mid-field.  Reynolds stood facing the alumni side of the stadium then raised the spear triumphantly overhead.  The crowd roared.  Then he turned to the student side and did the same.  Fans were in frenzy when he finally rammed the fiery point into the turf.

At a distance, no one could see the emotion on his face.  But whatever it meant to us, it meant even more to him.

I saw him another time after that, years later in Palm Beach.  He was a surprise visitor to the Palm Beach Seminole Club's annual Bobby Bowden Banquet.  We were back stage getting ready for him to make his appearance.  It wasn't the best time in his personal or professional life.  He was holding his little son.  He looked tired.  I said I didn't want to intrude, but I wanted him to know that there are lots of us FSU alumni who love him and appreciate what he's done for the University, and that fans like the ones here tonight will always be there for you.  You can always come home to Florida State.





His voice cracked just a little.  He said that his relationship with the fans gave him strength, and that was why he was there, that he needed now to draw on that strength.

Of course once the curtain went up and the hundreds of Seminoles whooped in shocked surprised, he was the ultimate professional.  He was classic celebrity Burt, the personality so familiar to everyone.  He and Coach Bowden shared the microphone.  After our traveling party packed in the van to drive to the airport, Burt stayed behind for nearly an hour, patiently taking photos, smiling, talking football and anything else his fans wanted.

They crushed in to be close to him, just to be with him.  And he wanted to be with them.

He loved FSU from the time he first saw the red bricks and the rolling hills and towering pines at age eighteen.  He loved the cool, green campus and the scented spring breeze and the pretty girls in their bright dresses.  He loved football and Phi Delta Theta and the food in the big dining hall where all Florida State students took their meals together.  He liked knowing everyone and knowing that everyone liked him.






Burton Reynolds was a devoted Seminole long before he was Burt Reynolds of the movies, decades before he was the #1-ranked male box office draw in the world.  And now, in the afternoon of a celebrated career as an actor, teacher and director, he remains a completely devoted son of Florida State University.






From time to time something from him, always welcome just shows up in the mail.  Most recently it was an autographed photo of him sporting the Mean Machine football uniform of his character from the new 2005 version of "The Longest Yard" charging full ahead with game-faced fury.






He's written: "Charlie - Do you know anybody that would like a mean, not fat but not too swift sixty-six year old running back?" 





Well yes, pal.  Yes I do.  And there are tens of thousands of us.



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After reading all of that, I gained a brand new appreciation for Burt Reynolds regarding his relationship with FSU and I hope you did as well.





As for the uniforms, the video says, they were "voted the best by Sporting News."
This post was edited on 9/12 7:45 AM by Singleshot

Link: Video discussing him helping with FSU uniforms "


Buddy on FSU uniforms