Students, faculty call for Baptist university president’s resignation In 1999, Carlos Webb, a star basketball player at Gardner-Webb University, was caught cheating in his religion class. Three years later, the way the Baptist university dealt with Webb has led to faculty resignations, administration demotions, and calls for the president to step down.
Under the university’s honor code, Webb was given a “cheating F.” Supposedly, such grades can never be removed from transcripts, even if the student retakes the class. But according to The Chronicle of Higher Education (its deeply reported article is available only to subscribers), faculty athletics representative Jeffrey Tubbs didn’t know Webb’s F was for cheating and told him to retake the course. By passing that class, and with two As and a B in other courses, Webb would be able to play for the team.
When Webb took Tubbs’s advice but was still ineligible because of the irremovable “cheating F,” Tubbs admitted his mistake and athletics officials asked the school’s vice president for academic affairs to cut Webb some slack. The veep refused, so they went to President M. Christopher White with the same request. He granted it, ordering the registrar in a memo to remove the “cheating F” and recalculate Webb’s grade point average.
Webb not only played, but he was named most valuable player as the team won the National Christian College Athletic Association championship. His story, meanwhile, stayed quiet for two years as the school ramped up its athletic programs. It is now a NCAA Division I school.
This September, the spurned vice president revealed what had happened, and the school has erupted. White apologized for “a lack of judgment,” but says he didn’t violate school rules. The faculty disagreed, and passed a resolution of “no confidence” in White by a 63-39 vote.
Meanwhile, the Board of Trustees hired a law firm to investigate the incident. It sided with White, as did the board of trustees. The vice president who had initially opposed the grade change and an assistant vice president who was also critical of White were both removed from their positions. In protest, three faculty members resigned.
The turmoil continues. Some trustees have reportedly signed a letter of disapproval for White, which says, “Gardner Webb is in serious trouble. We are sure that unless prevailing conditions are changed, the university will experience far reaching, long term adverse consequences of inaction.”
Other trustees are standing by White. “We did not feel it was appropriate to remove him from office for a one-time misjudgment made two years ago under complicated circumstances,” board chair E. Thomas Hardin says in a letter to the Charlotte Observer. “Integrity requires not bowing to an onslaught of unsubstantiated allegations presented through the news media or at hastily called meetings.”
“I know as Christians, we’re supposed to forgive,” student government president Patrick Woody told the Associated Press. “With forgiveness and mercy comes responsibility, and with responsibility is supposed to come justice—and I don’t think any justice has come from this.”
Freshman Nicole Potter says she’s disillusioned. “I saw Gardner-Webb as being a Christian school that upheld very strong Christian values and morals,” she told a Charlotte TV station. “With Dr. White performing the acts that he’s performed, that doesn’t seem very Christian to me and it’s really disappointed me.”
On Saturday, alumni and community leaders will meet to discuss the situation.
Greek Orthodox clergy will stay black and bearded Some Greek Orthodox priests have asked their bishops to change the dress code: long beards, heavy black robes, large hats. Not only is the dress code unbearable in summer’s heat, they said, but it makes them unapproachable. (The Associated Press puts it this way: “Opponents of the dress code say most women are unwilling to be seen with a man in robes and a long beard.”) Too bad, the church said Wednesday. “The robe makes us responsible and protects us from any wrongdoing,” Archbishop Christodoulos explained. The only relief is for priests who live in rural parishes, says Bishop Anthimos, a church spokesman. “Many of them have to tend to their fields. It is acceptable for them to wear shorter robes.”
More articles
Missions and ministries:
- Toll-free Nashville prayer line gives support to all who call | The Nashville-based Upper Room Living Prayer Center receives more than 25,000 telephone prayer requests each month. (The Tennessean)
- Inspired by faith, the poor rush forth to offer food | Their generosity, they say, is ‘what God teaches’ (Los Angeles Times)
- Graham pledges message of love | Evangelist invites members of all faiths to Texas Stadium crusade. (The Dallas Morning News)
- Behind bars, the study of theology builds self-respect | Some participants are religious, some not. But they all want an education. (The Christian Science Monitor)
Crime:
- Cover-up | Arizona faces a “Waco-level” threat from Mormon fundamentalists. (Phoenix New Times)
- Prayer book turns aside shooting-spree bullet | Inspiration for the Heart from the Prayer of Jabez, by Bruce Wilkinson, offers prayers of protection in more ways than one (Fox News)
- Polygamist cop charged with bigamy | A member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is charged for having three wives, one who is 16-years-old. (Associated Press)
Other stories of interest:
- Religion not for us, Danes say | We’re happy to pay the church-tax—we’re just not very interested in religion (The Copenhagen Post)
- What would Saint Francis do? | The great man was not the dreamy hippie of the birdbath, however. He was made of stern stuff (Donald Spoto, San Francisco Chronicle)
- People’s Opium? Religion and economic attitudes | Religious beliefs are associated with good’ economic attitudes, where good’ is defined as conducive to higher per capita income and growth. Yet religious people tend to be more racist and less favorable with respect to working women (National Bureau of Economic Research)
- Serious and silly | Religious action figures are battling for new buyers. (The Detroit News)
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