The AP and Dartmouth Trustees
One of the trustees, Todd Zywicki, lamented that"Dartmouth has drifted from its core mission in recent years,” often by diverting funds to"programs of questionable educational value.” He also celebrated the intricate link between teaching and research.
As the insurgents have prevailed, Dartmouth has kept changing the rules to make it harder for candidates not approved by the administration to prevail; yet last week, the latest insurgent, University of Virginia law professor Stephen Smith, won.
Here is how an astonishingly slanted AP article covered Smith’s triumph:
* It suggested that while Dartmouth had in recent years tried to “make the campus more welcoming to women, minorities and scholars,” Smith “appreciated the old Dartmouth,” characterized by “rowdy fraternities—such as the one that inspired the movie ‘Animal House.’”
* It contended that Smith opposed “codes regulating hate speech,” even though, as any glance through the annals of FIRE would reveal, these codes have a chilling effect on all speech.
* It implied that Smith, who is African-American and attended Dartmouth, opposed the “cultural shifts at campuses that were previously all-male and nearly all-white.”
* It reported that defenders of the administration “said Smith was not forthcoming about his conservative background, including a clerkship with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.” (In fact, Smith’s website says, “After law school, I worked for two federal judges. The first was Judge David B. Sentelle on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The second was Justice Clarence Thomas at the Supreme Court of the United States.”)
* It claimed that while Smith is a conservative (as he undeniably is), his opponents were not diversity advocates (as they undeniably were) but figures who embraced “mainstream” ideas.
The article then closed with a quote not from the victorious candidate but from Dartmouth president James Wright, who remarked, “For those people who don't like goals that include diversity, that don't include faculty doing scholarship, I'm sorry, but I think those are the best traditions of Dartmouth.”
In general, the AP’s stories are characterized by a no-nonsense, facts-only approach. Apparently when covering higher-ed issues, they prefer an op-ed approach.