Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Still simmering

- Mike Masterson Mike Masterson is a longtime Arkansas journalist, was editor of three Arkansas dailies and headed the master’s journalism program at Ohio State University. Email him at mmasterson@arkansason­line.com.

Lest you believe the flap over the recent prohibitio­n on law professor Rob Steinbuch’s long-approved use of guest lecturers during absences on Jewish high holidays has passed, think again.

I say that because a committee at the UALR Bowen Law School recently voted to recommend eliminatin­g the school’s guest lecturer policy to the full Bowen faculty, keeping the issue alive.

For years, policy has allowed guest lecturers to cover Bowen classes when faculty members were legitimate­ly absent (as on religious holidays).

Steinbuch said the action by four fellow professors on the committee was “clearly personal and aimed at my particular situation during the Jewish holidays when for nearly 20 years I have invited legal profession­als and judges to educate classes about our practice in the real world.”

A decorated law professor and the state’s leading Freedom of Informatio­n Act expert, who also is seeking election to the House of Representa­tives for District

73 in Little Rock, Steinbuch may be on to something, considerin­g the school’s visiting- lecturer policy wasn’t an issue until challenged by Bowen Dean Theresa Beiner last year. That’s after Steinbuch had invited a federal judge to lecture his class during his religious-observance absence, as he had done many times before.

Moreover, Steinbuch said the committee in question hadn’t even been assigned to address the issue of preserving guest lecturers. “They appear to have manufactur­ed that issue out of whole cloth.”

The faculty had directed committee members to address ambiguitie­s in legitimate circumstan­ces where professors are permitted to miss classes. “Yet the committee chose from the outset to pursue this different agenda on their own,” said Steinbuch.

At least two committee members reportedly claimed they were acting under instructio­ns from the “main campus.” However, Steinbuch said that claim appears to have since vanished considerin­g the school’s response to a related FOIA request “unsurprisi­ngly provided zero support for that assertion.”

Steinbuch continued: “The proposal this committee slapped together also prevents Bowen’s own highly lauded adjunct professors from covering my class during my religious observance­s. So does that then mean adjunct professors are good enough to teach an entire course at Bowen, including my own, but somehow are not good enough to cover my class when God dictates my absence for, at the most, two days a semester?”

Strikes me as a logical question. How else can it be interprete­d?

Steinbuch told me he believes university leadership outside the law school has been trying to “right the ship” over the matter in favor of logic and fairness. But this committee’s action means either he was mistaken or the university’s larger message “hasn’t trickled down. Either way, it ain’t good.”

Josh Silverstei­n, a Jewish Bowen professor on the committee, was the sole vote against the change: “I found every argument made in favor of eliminatin­g the right to use an independen­t guest speaker to be wholly unpersuasi­ve.”

The committee’s recommenda­tion now heads to a vote of the full faculty.

Letter from Ila

Ila Campbell with Moms for Liberty, whose victory in a recent FOIA lawsuit against the Fayettevil­le Public School District over embracing critical race theory, sent a message the other day. I felt readers (particular­ly parents) would find it both relevant and interestin­g. It also once again shows the value of our FOIA for citizens seeking truth about what is transpirin­g in public agencies, including their school districts.

“Mike, I want to thank you for your recent article on the Fayettevil­le Public School District. Giving the facts concerning the recent FOIA lawsuit is important to help inform the public about the real issues facing our district.

“The [thousands of pages] of documentat­ion provide a picture of the ideologica­l agenda of CRT being embedded into the profession­al developmen­t and curriculum of our district. This includes the component of gender identity.

“The presence of policies and plans on this issue implying the circumvent­ing of parental rights is extremely troubling, as is the presence of graphic and sexually explicit books on our library shelves.

“The Washington County chapter of Moms for Liberty was establishe­d this past year as a means to continue and strengthen our efforts to protect our children and the rights of parents. Three more M4L chapters have since been establishe­d in Arkansas. More chapters will follow as awareness grows and more is revealed about the move from merit and rigor in our schools to the indoctrina­tion promoted by ‘equity’ programs now becoming the focus in public education.

“Thank you for helping to bring truth to the public. This is imperative if we are to again see our public schools as educationa­l institutio­ns of excellence providing preparatio­n and opportunit­y for our children to become successful and productive citizens.

“There is much left to do … also thank you for providing encouragem­ent and support to continue in our efforts.”

No, thank you, Ila, for your courage and tenacity on behalf of the public.

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