Chronicle of Higher Education, Nov. 12 2015

COMMENTARY
In Missouri, the Downfall of a Business-Minded President
By Bruce Joshua Miller and Ned Stuckey-French

Timothy Wolfe should never have been president of the University of 
Missouri. He was a computer-company executive with no advanced degrees 
or experience in academic administration. Like so many other 
unrepresentative, politically appointed boards, Missouri’s Board of 
Curators chose a private-sector manager to run a public university. 
Wolfe had virtually no experience with students or scholars.

If he had, one of his first major decisions as president in the spring 
of 2012 would not have been to shut down the University of Missouri 
Press. The internationally respected press had been in existence for 54 
years and had published over 2,000 titles. These titles included the 
definitive edition of the collected works of Langston Hughes and the 
premier series of Mark Twain scholarship. No American writers have 
written more insightfully about race than these two sons of Missouri, 
but Wolfe was going to sell off the rights to these titles at 
garage-sale prices.

A few weeks later, the Board of Curators approved Wolfe’s decision to 
close the press, ostensibly to save its annual subsidy of about $400,000 
(later estimated to be much less). At the same meeting, it announced 
Phase 1 of a $200-million plan to upgrade Mizzou’s sports facilities.

By committing the university to an athletic arms race and running it 
like a corporation, Wolfe and the board were heading down a disastrous 
path. By committing the university to an athletic arms race and running 
it like a corporation, Wolfe and the board were heading down a 
disastrous path. More than 5,000 people signed an online petition 
opposing the closure of the press, scores of authors claimed breach of 
contract and demanded that the rights to their books be returned, 
Missouri’s principal newspapers supported the protest movement, and 
Wolfe and the university found themselves in the national news. By fall, 
Wolfe was forced to reverse his position and reinstate the press.
We can see now that these events presaged what has happened in Columbia 
this fall. Public universities are public trusts, not private 
corporations. They are a public good in which we must all invest. We 
used to view them this way. Forty years ago, about two-thirds of their 
revenue came from state appropriations; that figure is now down to about 
a fifth. Administrators have tried to wring these lost revenues out of 
already strapped middle-class parents and their children through higher 
tuition and enormous student-loan burdens. In the meantime, the number 
of administrators has skyrocketed, and their compensation packages have 
swelled to private-sector levels.

On campus, tenure is attacked, teaching is shifted to poorly paid 
adjuncts and teaching assistants, and students are treated shabbily. 
Their demands for safe campuses, challenging classes, and basic respect 
are too often ignored. The privatization of public higher education led 
Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin, who has since agreed to step down, to yank 
medical insurance away from graduate assistants, and it led President 
Wolfe to rush to meetings with big donors while ignoring the concerns of 
African-American students.

Fortunately, such bottom-line thinking has also led students, faculty, 
and staff to fight back. This fall Missouri provided us all with the 
brave example of student leaders (including athletes) who were willing 
to risk everything in order to make their university the place of 
learning it should be. Our hope is that the Board of Curators will pick 
new administrators who see the University of Missouri as a public 
institution to which we have entrusted our children and our society’s 
future rather than as a corporation that puts money and skyboxes first.

Making this happen will be difficult. State governors appoint the 
boards, and the boards appoint the presidents and chancellors. Such a 
system, as we have seen recently at Purdue, Iowa, the University of 
North Carolina, and Florida State as well as at Missouri, has led to the 
appointments of businesspeople, bureaucrats, lobbyists, and politicians 
as university presidents. Such appointments do not bode well — but 
students, faculty, and staff at the University of Missouri have demanded 
something different.

We cannot thank them enough.

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