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An Overview of the Entire Controversy
Background: Before Sept. 11
The Year 2001 - 2002
The Year 2002 - 2003
Recent News
The year 2001 - 2002:
Fall: 9/11/01 - 12/18/01
Aftermath: 12/19/01 - 1/31/02
Second Thoughts: 2/1/02 - 3/19/02
Alarums & Excursions: 3/19/02 - 6/10/02
Summertime: 6/11/02 - 8/20/02
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Alarums and Excursions

Links from March 20 to June 10, 2002

The semester ended in early May, and people were winding down long before then. So there was quantitatively less news. But the news there was was very topical: a lawsuit, FBI raids for records of organizations connected to Al-Arian's groups, and other drama swirled around an Administration that was still thinking about what to do, what to do, what to do ...

These links are in a very rough chronological order, and will be updated as events develop. Again, links marked with an asterisk (*) are to the LEXIS-NEXIS site: this is restricted to on-campus users and requires that the user do a search; two asterisks (**) apply to other restrictions.

WARNING ABOUT `LINK ROT': Some websites take pages down, or restrict access to them, after some time passes. So unfortunately, some of the links on these pages will be inoperative. However, most of the items can be found by searching lexis-nexis.

Here are links back to the site map, to the main Al-Arian page of this site, and to the main UFF/USF page.

``No, no!'' said the Queen.
``Sentence first --
verdict afterwards.''
- Lewis Carroll

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Second Thoughts
2/1/02 - 3/19/02
Next:
Summer Suspended
6/10/02 - 8/20/02
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Alarms and Investigations

Wednesday, March 20, was a very busy day. Customs agents raided fourteen targets in Virginia, including the offices of the International Institute of Islamic Thought, which had ties to Al-Arian's World Islamic Studies Enterprise (WISE) and Islamic Committee for Palestine (ICP), back in 1995, before WISE and ICP were closed. The raids were conducted by a task force insituted to pursue financial ties to terrorist organizations. This was news, but it was news in which the non-local press found Al-Arian to have a rather small part:

At the Mar. 20 Faculty Senate meeting, USF/UFF President Roy Weatherford reminded the Senate of the limited scope of UFF's involvement: ``If he [Al-Arian] has engaged in misdeeds in his private life, that's his problem ... if the university proceeds against him without due process and just cause, its a terrible precedent.'' Later that day, he would explain to FOX 13 that, ``What we oppose is the Administration trying to fire Al-Arian without just cause and without due process.'' He went on to point out the difference between having suspicions on the one hand, and proving specific charges on the other.

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Repurcussions

The fall-out after the raids began immediately.

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Its a bird! Its a plane! Its ...

On March 20, same day of the first raids, John Loftus, President of the Florida Holocaust Museum, filed a law suit against Al-Arian, while complaining about foot-dragging in the department of Justice. Loftus filed the suit under Florida consumer protection law, which provides for a donor to sue a charity for financial irregularities: Loftus donated a few dollars to Al-Arian in March and then filed suit for financial misconduct allegedly occuring many years ago. (Mr. Loftus has posted many legal documents on this suit.)

  • On Mar. 20, the Associated Press reported that *Tampa lawsuit accuses professor, Saudis of supporting terror. Also on Mar. 20, Foxnews posted an AP story not posted in Lexis saying that Lawsuit Accuses Saudis of Terror Support.
  • The Mar. 21 Oracle said in Museum president sues Al-Arian that Loftus claimed that Al-Arian and the Saudis were conspiring against America.
  • The Mar. 21 St. Petersburg Times said that Suit labels Al-Arian terrorist fundraiser: A former federal lawyer accuses the USF professor of using charities to finance Mideast terrorists the Times ran a profile of Loftus on Mar. 22. On Mar. 28, the Times ran a story on how Flaws in Al-Arian suit raise doubts, saying that, ``Errors of fact and spelling, plus a reliance on confidential sources, may weaken the lawsuit against the professor.''
  • On Mar. 21, John Loftus and Al-Arian's attorney Robert McKee appeared on *The O'Reilly Factor, and Loftus said, ``What I did was I told the CIA and the Justice Department back on March 11, I'm going to give you a deadline or I'm going to expose the entire case. Now the night before I filed the case, the Justice Department asked me to give him a few more hours, because they were going to go ahead with the raids.'' So Loftus said he very kindly waited until the following morning.
  • The Mar. 27 - Apr. 2 Weekly Planet ran a 2-column edition of their Discomfort Zone:
    • Fawn Germer does not know what is true, and is very wary of all sides.
    • John Sugg delves into Loftus's history and calls the suit a smear.
  • In the Apr. 3 - Apr. 9 Weekly Planet, John Sugg ran another expose of Loftus's past, contacting some of Loftus's old acquaintances in the Justice Department to get disparaging remarks. In the same issue, Loftus wrote a Letter to the Editor saying that (a) Sugg was relying on news stories known to be false and (b) that Sugg screamed at him over the phone. Loftus concluded by accusing Sugg of acting ``with malice and reckless disregard for the truth,'' and the Planet got in the last word with, ``The Planet and Mr. Sugg respectfully disagree with Mr. Loftus.'' In the Apr. 17 - 23 Weekly Planet, Loftus sent in another rebuttal.
The April 2 story on the Loftus Suit in The Washington Times is entitled, Clinton White House axed terror-fund probe, although Hillary does not appear to be involved.

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Speeches

By now, people were coming to this campus --- and to other campuses --- to speak about this issue (and related issues).

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Reflections

As the semester approached an end, it was time to look backwards at the affair, and perhaps speculate on what is to come.

  • The April 2 Oracle reported that Al-Arian's departure left students academically unstable, with students saying that his class was disrupted when instructors were switched in mid-semester, and two graduate students had their programs disrupted.
  • Yet on April 3, the Oracle reported that Interest in USF high despite Al-Arian case: niether undergraduate enrollment nor job searches for administrators seem to have been impacted by the controversy.
  • And on April 4, the Oracle reported that The fluctuation in financial support to the university isn't totally caused by the Sami Al-Arian controversy, officials say: donations are down, but that is partly because of the economy and anthrax fears about mail. USF Foundations BP Vicki Mitchell said that, ``the magnitude of impact was created by reporters who don't understand fund raising.'' She didn't mention that it was the Board of Trustees that brought up the whole subject of impact on donations.
  • On April 8, the Oracle ran a story, Threats subsiding over time: Police say death threats have decreased since the original airing of Sami Al-Arian's O'Reilly Factor, recapitulating the original threat, and follow-up apology, phoned to the Computer Science Department.
  • On April 9, the Oracle ran a story on how University officials around the state say Sami Al-Arian's case calls for a tough decision. In this story there were comparisons with the case of the late FSU psychology professor Glayde Whitney, who had claimed that African Americans were intellectually inferior and even wrote the forward for a book by former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke; Whitney, a tenured professor, was not subjected to any formal discipline.
  • On April 19, the Socialist Worker interviewed Al-Arian, in which he said ``This is like fighting ghosts''. He also said ``This is an orchestrated political campaign by people who would like to settle political scores, and they found an opening after September 11.''
  • On April 23, the Oracle talked to Alvin Wolfe of the USF Group for Phi Beta Kappa on how Censure could cost USF, and while a ``Phi Beta Kappa official says the university shouldn't even apply for its honor if censured by the AAUP, but USF administrators say talks of censure are premature.''
  • On April 25, the Tampa Tribune talked to William Van Alstyne of the AAUP about his impression that he Sees USF Shift On Al-Arian (notice error in headline). The article said that Genshaft, ``... stands by her announced intention Dec. 19 to fire Al-Arian, and she said her deliberate pace in making a final decision does not mean she is wavering.''
  • On April 26, the St. Petersburg Times also ran a story on the AAUP Team report, in which Team Chair William Van Alstyne claimed that Genshaft wavering on Al-Arian's fate. Like the Tribune article, the Times quoted USF spokesman Michael Riech's comment on the AAUP: ``We will not let some union dictate what we will do.''
  • On April 26, at 9 pm, Tampa's big PBS station WEDU's program Tampa Bay Week had as one of its topics Will Al-Arian Teach Again at USF? From the four panelists:
    • Former State Representative of Tampa Mary Figg observed that, ``one of the problems is that Al-Arian is not a sympathetic figure, at least on public TV.''
    • Tampa Tribune Editorial Writer Joe Brown compared Al-Arian's case to that of Pete Rose, and said that if Al-Arian violated the contract, Genshaft should say how.
    • HCC Professor & McBride for Governor Campaign Treasurer Liana Fox said that while we are more security conscious since Sept. 11, campus safety has always been a serious issue.
    • USF/UFF Chapter President Roy Weatherford said that, ``every day that goes by without actual notification of dismissal is a sign that [Genshaft] is less sure than before ...'' He also recalled getting death threats during the civil rights era, and warned that using reception of threats as a ground for dismissal will only encourage troublemakers to make threats in order to get unpopular people dismissed.
The semester was winding down, and everyone is rushing around trying to get things done by The Day Grades Are Due, May 3, so unsurprisingly, less is happening. Nevertheless, on April 24, Google listed this site as 7th out of ``about 3,650'' on ``al-arian.''

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A Third USF/UFF Freedom Forum on the Johns Committee

The UFF sponsored a third Freedom Forum, on The Johns Committee in Florida and at USF on Thursday, April 25, at 4 pm, in the Grace Allen Room in the USF main library.

  • It began with a video produced at the University of Florida, Behind Closed Doors, on the origins of the Johns Committee (the crippling bus boycott in Tallahassee in 1956, the Legislative Committee under Charlie Johns, its humiliating failure to corner the NAACP, its pursuit of alleged communists, and then onto its more successful mission of hunting homosexuals).
  • With USF/UFF Chapter President Roy Weatherford moderating, the meeting then moved to a panel discussion, and on the panel was:
    • Charlie Arnade, Distinguished Professor of Governmental and International Affairs, who appeared before the Johns Committee three times, and has been at USF since 1961.
    • Jim Schnur, of the USF-Bayboro (St. Petersburg) Poynter Library, who did his master's thesis on the Johns Committee (as well as a shorter piece, Cold warriors in the hot sunshine: USF and the Johns Committee (in .pdf), in the Sunland Tribune.
    • Flora Zbar, Professor of English, who arrived at USF in 1965 and had some stories to tell of the aftermath.
  • There was an open-mike session for Questions & Answers & Reminescences, with tales of policemen taking license plate numbers of cars parked outside Unitarian meetings, tales of hostility from an old Tampa (loyal to and jealous for the University of Tampa) towards the new university, tales of the tendency of university administrations to take controversial actions during vacations, tales of how USF was censured by the AAUP (and the aftermath, when conversations at academic conferences featured questions about What Is Going On In USF?), and, inevitably, comparisons with current events.
As this was important oral history, it was taped: copies will eventually be available at the USF University Media Center.

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A Resolution from Friends in CUNY

On April 25, the Executive Council and Delegate Assembly of the Professional Staff Congress of the City University of New York, American Federation of Teachers Local 2334, passed a Resolution in Support of the United Faculty of Florida Chapter at the University of South Florida in Tampa, stating that ``... WHEREAS, this threat to academic freedom and the First Amendment has all the hallmarks of a politically motivated attack on the personal views of a member of the university community uttered extramurally ... THEREFORE, be it resolved, that we join in solidarity with them in their struggle (and donate $100 in support of their efforts) ...''. USF/UFF is grateful to our brothers & sisters up north for their support.

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Summertime ...

Commencement was on May 4, 5. There are in fact several commencement ceremonies, for it would take a football field to hold the entire class of 2002. And then there is a lull of several weeks between the end of the Spring semester and the beginning of Summer Session A. Usually, this lull is marked by little observable activity other than construction here and there. Meanwhile ...

  • On May 5, the St. Petersburg Times ran a guest column by Kathleen Ochshorn, Professor of English at the University of Tampa, on a *Cautionary tale of past USF censure, about how after the AAUP censured USF, the USF Administration was spooked by external pressure into firing an untenured faculty member, a Robert Stevenson, who had had the temerity to help organize a protest against St. Leo College Commencement Speaker Melvin Laird. In the ensuing court case, USF lost and paid damages of $ 7,500.
  • Promoting Responsibility In Middle-East Reporting, a local organization, has been pushing a Petition to President Genshaft calling on her to ``... remain steadfast in [her] decision to dismiss Sami Al-Arian ...'' The Petition states that Al-Arian should be dismissed because of ``his inflammatory speech and verifiable links to terrorists'' and complains that he has ``single handedly caused the shameful label `Jihad University' to be bestowed'' on USF. (Of course, it was NOT Al-Arian who bestowed that label, but anyway ...) PRIMER President Norman Gross announced that on May 7, he will present BOT Chairman Richard Beard, or at least his office, with a box of 14,800 signatures. The May 7 Tampa Tribune reported that Petition Urges Al-Arian Firing, while in the May 7 St. Petersburg Times story Thousands support firing Al-Arian, Beard said, ``We are grateful for the support and overwhelmed by the effort. It shows a strong level of commitment by those who signed,'' while Al-Arian's attorney Robert McKee reminded reporters that the issue is a question of law, not popularity.
  • Meanwhile, Al-Arian's brother-in-law, detained on a 180-day deportation order issued Nov. 24, has lawyers arguing that the 180 days are up and he should be deported or released. This story was reported in *the May 14 Associated Press, the May 15 St. Petersburg Times, and the May 16 Oracle.
  • On June 3, National Public Radio ran a story *Palestinian man fights for release from jail in the US while the INS works to deport him, on al-Arian's efforts to aid his brother-in-law Mazen Al-Najjar, who is in solitary confinement, detained on orders from the INS, based on secret evidence.
But news does not stop, just for Summer.

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June ...

After a quiet May, a noisier June. Former USF adjunct Ramadan Shallah, now ``Secretary-General'' of Islamic Jihad, stepped forward to claim ... credit ... for his share of the chaos in Israel. Shallah had worked for one of Al-Arian's organizations, WISE, before leaving and later surfacing (much to the surprise of USF and all involved intelligence agencies) in Islamic Jihad in 1995: in fact, it is this job change that was the original focus of the investigations by USF (which found no evidence of any wrongdoing by Al-Arian) and the FBI (which is still investigating whatever it is still investigating).

On June 7, Fox News *interviewed John Loftus, who is suing Al-Arian. Loftus claimed that Al-Arian was a co-founder of Islamic Jihad, and is the current head of its American branch. Al-Arian is not his only target, for he makes a number of other serious charges, including the claim that prior to Sept. 11, ``at the highest levels in Washington, they were not allowing people to connect the dots'' [emphasis added], and he launches perhaps the five zillionth conspiracy theory involving the planned Afghan pipeline.
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On June 8, Committee A on Academic Freedom for the American Association of University Professors released an interim statement on the history of the AAUP's involvement in the controversy, and the status of its current (incomplete) investigation. Committee A reported that the, ``investigating committee believes that Professor Al-Arian's statements fell well within the ambit of academic freedom. Other currently pending charges against Professor Al-Arian have been characterized by the investigating committee as too insubstantial to warrant serious consideration as adequate cause for dismissal.'' Perhaps to make the point more clear, there is a link on the News Release page dated March 7 labelled, ``University of South Florida - Media Background: What is Censure?'' This prompted a buzz of press bees: Meanwhile, Cathy Young, a contributing editor to Reason magazine, reported in a column on Patriotism in academia that at the May 31 - June 2 Conference of the National Association of Scholars, that there was a ... spirited exchange ... between Boston Attorney Harvey Silverglate, co-director of the libertarian Foundation for Individual Rights in Education on one side, versus author Ronald Radosh and Middle East Forum director Daniel Pipes on the other (Ms Young did not mention which side University of Chicago Professor Cass Sunstein was on). The positions of Radosh and Pipes were a bit tangled, albeit essentially sort of in favor of doing something about Al-Arian, while the more focussed Silverglate defended free expression. Interestingly, Radosh brought up the problem of Joe McCarthy labelling dissidents as ``traitors,'' and worried about similarities with current events. The announced theme of this conference was ``Higher Education and Democracy in Peace and War.''
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On June 11, Loftus's suit against Al-Arian was dismissed; he was given twenty days to resubmit.


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spacer Previous:
Second Thoughts
2/1/02 - 3/19/02
Next:
Summer Suspended
6/10/02 - 8/20/02
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spacer Al-Arian Site Home
USF/UFF Site Home
Major Postings
The Issues
Contact Us
Site Map
An Overview of the Entire Controversy
Background: Before Sept. 11
The Year 2001 - 2002
The Year 2002 - 2003
Recent News
The year 2001 - 2002:
Fall: 9/11/01 - 12/18/01
Aftermath: 12/19/01 - 1/31/02
Second Thoughts: 2/1/02 - 3/19/02
Alarums & Excursions: 3/19/02 - 6/10/02
Summertime: 6/11/02 - 8/20/02
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