Rightwing group offers students $100 to spy on professors
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1689653,00.html?gusrc=rss

Dan Glaister in Los Angeles
Thursday January 19, 2006
The Guardian

It is the sort of invitation any poverty-stricken student would find hard to
resist. "Do you have a professor who just can't stop talking about President
Bush, about the war in Iraq, about the Republican party, or any other
ideological issue that has nothing to do with the class subject matter? If
you help ... expose the professor, we'll pay you for your work."

For full notes, a tape recording and a copy of all teaching materials,
students at the University of California Los Angeles are being offered $100
(£57) - the tape recorder is provided free of charge - by an alumni group.

Lecture notes without a tape recording net $50, and even non-attendance at
the class while providing copies of the teaching materials is worth $10.

But the initiative has prompted concerns that the group, the brainchild of a
former leader of the college's Republicans, is a witch-hunt. Several
targeted professors have complained, figures associated with the group have
distanced themselves from the project and the college is studying whether
the sale of notes infringes copyright and contravenes regulations.

The Bruin Alumni Association's single registered member is Andrew Jones, a
24-year-old former student who gained some notoriety while at the university
for staging an "affirmative action bake sale" at which ethnic minority
students were offered discounts on pastries.

His latest project has academics worrying about moves by rightwing groups to
counter what they perceive to be a leftist bias at many colleges.

The group's website, uclaprofs.com, lists 31 professors whose classes it
considers worthy of scrutiny. The professors teach classes in history,
African-American studies, politics, and Chicano studies. Their supposed
radicalism is indicated on the site by a rating system of black fists. The
organisation denies on the website that it is conducting a vendetta against
those with differing political views. "We are concerned solely with
indoctrination, one-sided presentation of ideological controversies and
unprofessional classroom behaviour, no matter where it falls on the
ideological spectrum."

But in another posting, it is clear just where on the spectrum the group
thinks the bias might fall. "One aspect of this radicalisation, outlined
here, is an unholy alliance between anti-war professors, radical Muslim
students and a pliant administration. Working together, they have made UCLA
a major organising centre for opposition to the war on terror."




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