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07.28.2009 4:23 pm

U of I trustee Lawrence Eppley resigns amid admissions controversy

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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U of I board member Lawrence Eppley

This news just moved on the wire: Lawrence Eppley, the University of Illinois board member and former chairman of the board, has sent a letter of resignation to the governor. In the letter, he apparently urges other board members to do the same. Some lawmakers have called on the entire board to resign amid the controversy surrounding the university’s admission practices, which in some cases favored well-connected applicants. Eppley is among those accused of pressuring the school to admit certain students.

Here is the Associated Press story:

By DAVID MERCER
Associated Press Writer

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — University of Illinois trustee Lawrence Eppley offered his resignation Tuesday amid a growing scandal over the role of political influence in student admissions at the state’s flagship system.

Eppley sent Gov. Pat Quinn a letter, obtained by The Associated Press, that says he will step down in 90 days or as soon as a successor is appointed. He called on fellow trustees to do the same.

As the ultimate body of governance and leadership of this University, the trustees must help maintain the confidence of our shareholders, who in this case are the people of Illinois,” Eppley wrote. “Just as in the corporate world, shareholders’ lack of confidence in an organization justifies effecting changes.”

Eppley, criticized for pushing candidates recommended by ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich, also called for unnamed administrators to accept responsibility for the admissions uproar at the university.

“While the trustees are, in the end, responsible for the overall governance of the University, it is also important that the public has confidence and trust in the campus administrators who bear responsibility for the day-to-day decisions that have impacted the U of I in these circumstances,” Eppley wrote.

Eppley did not immediately return a call for comment. His office voice mail indicates he will be away until early August.

A spokeswoman for Quinn, who has sole authority to appoint trustees, would only confirm the governor received the letter Tuesday afternoon.

Quinn appointed a commission to investigate the role of political power in university admissions after news reports revealed the school’s Urbana-Champaign campus keeps a list of politically connected applicants, some of whom were admitted to the school despite lackluster credentials.

The list, known as Category I, and thousands of pages of e-mails and other documents released by the university reveal that lawmakers and university trustees, Eppley included, often inquired about well-connected applicants.

Eppley, the former board chairman, e-mailed university President B. Joseph White about candidates supported by Blagojevich, who appointed Eppley to the board in 2001.

One of those candidates was a relative of convicted influence peddler Tony Rezko, a central figure in Blagojevich corruption investigation. The applicant initially was going to be denied admission but was admitted in 2005.

Eppley has said he did not know Rezko or know or who he was when he e-mailed White about Blagojevich’s interest.

In testimony in early July before the commission examining admissions, university Chancellor Richard Herman said he felt pressured to admit candidates backed by trustees, particularly Eppley.

Eppley, in his own testimony, said he now recognizes that inquiries made by trustees, lawmakers and other powerful figures served as an “underground recommendation system,” something he said he didn’t fully realize until recently.

In testimony to the commission Monday, former university President Stanley Ikenberry and James Stukel called for Eppley and most other trustees to resign or be removed.

Stukel called in particular for Eppley, current chair Niranjan Shah and Robert Vickrey to be removed, calling them products of the Blagojevich era and saying they were the board members most likely to make decisions with politics and power in mind.

Eppley, a graduate of the university’s law school, was chair of the board of trustees from 2003 through 2008.

The Grade is the St. Louis region’s premier blog on education and child welfare. To read other recent posts, go to www.stltoday,com/thegrade.

2 comments

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and somewhere in heaven, an angel finally gets its wings

— AE2010
9:51 pm July 28th, 2009

I attained my MBA in 2008, and for over a year now, I have nor received any job offers yet! Even the UoP here in Orlando Florida would nopt hire me for whatever reason! Remember how much pampering you got when you first spoke with your UoP “personal” adviser about the opportunities and how everyone was ready to assist you even help you find a job after you graduate! Gone with the wind all those rehearsed phrases and promises! The reality is the UoP is not even rcognized as areputable grad school and some big companies, such as Intel, a few years ago stopped reimbursing tuition fees to their employees if they choose to go to the UoP! There are many accredited grad schools with reputable names and better opportunities. The UoP is in this business for profit! Period! It is almost certain that the UoP degrees will be classified just like the tabloids in the media business! Rubbish! Unfortunately, most of us, the UoP grads are stuck with a worthless-decorated piece of paper! More such piece of papers (degrees, including MBAs) are issued every year! And when there is an abundance of such rubbish, it becomes more and more worthless! I would suggest to anyone out there to think twice and choose an accredited and reputable school if you will have to pay back you student loans or are aspiring to have a successful career! Best of Luck!

— Mo
5:44 pm August 7th, 2009