Remarks by Senate President Gilkey to the UO Senate 24 May 2000


It is an honor to welcome the new Senators of the 2000/2001 Senate. I told the UO Assembly at the beginning of this academic year: "The University of Oregon has a long tradition of shared governance. The University Senate together with the elected and appointed committees are an integral part of that tradition. As Senate President during this year, my primary role is to facilitate the smooth working of these structures." It has been a high honor and privilege to serve as your Senate President and to facilitate your work this year and I am grateful for the opportunity. I would like to thank the Parliamentarian (Paul Simonds) and the Secretary of the Senate (Gwen Steigelman) for trying to keep me out of trouble this year - to quote President Frohnmayer: "Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it." (As an aside, I attended the UOAA meeting on Saturday - it was a great meeting. I copied down all the jokes President Frohnmayer told. I am going to recycle most of them here as he has a much better speech writer than I do!). I would like to thank your Senate Executive Committee (James Earl, Jeremy Grzybowski, Barbara Jenkins, Greg McLaughlin, Margaret Paris, Gwen Steigelman, Nathan Tublitz, Thomas Wheeler), your Senate Rules Committee (Margaret Paris and Jim Schombert), and your Senate Nominating Committee (Elizabeth Housworth and Priscilla Southwell). They have worked long and hard on your behalf and deserve your gratitude.

I believe passionately in the ideal of shared governance and am delighted to report that shared governance is alive and well at our University.  The President of the University remarked: "Timing has an awful lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance." I have been fortunate this year to be Senate President when so much was accomplished by others. Let me enumerate four items that we all can take pride in.

Primus: The work of the Senate Budget Committee, comprised of Professors Frank, Kellman Tublitz, and Westling and of Provost Moseley is one exemplar. Rather than engaging in sterile confrontation, the SBC worked together to make a start at solving some of our salary problems. Although much remains to be done, an excellent beginning has been made. The three documents the SBC presented and that the Senate subsequently adopted provide valuable guidelines for the future.

Secondus: The statement of  ``community values'' reminds us: "The University of Oregon has a long and illustrious history in the area of academic freedom and freedom of speech. A culture of respect that honors the rights, safety, dignity and worth of every individual is essential to preserve such freedom" - this statement of shared community values is an outgrowth of the work of the Diversity interns with input from many people; it was adopted by the UO Senate, and promulgated by UO President Frohnmayer. It is truly a work of shared governance.

Tertius: The Distinguished Service Awards. There were many excellent nominees from the faculty this year and the University can be proud of the winner(s) when the awards are presented at commencement. However, all members of the University Community must continue to participate actively in the nomination process - I commend to your attention DSA Committee Chair Dave Hubin with the Latin Motto: FUREM FUR COGNOSCIT ET LUPIUM LUPUS.

Quartious: The WRC. The President remarked "It's always darkest before dawn. So if you're going to steal the neighbor's newspaper,  that's the time to do it", and of his own role that: "It may be that your sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others." As noted above, President Frohnmayer has a much better speechwriter than I do. But in addition to his jokes, I would like to share with you some of the things I and others on Saturday concerning matters related to the WRC.

  1. During academic 2000/2001, the Senate Executive Committee will function as the Senate oversight  committee described in US9900-10B and will bring its recommendation to the Senate in due course
  2. The recommendation from the Senate Executive Committee will, subsequent to appropriate Senate action, be transmitted to the President of the University of Oregon.
  3. Comments will be invited from the affected community (students, administrators, faculty, trustees, alumni, licensees, etc.).
  4. The review will be thorough and complete.
Our University is in many ways like an extended family - and included within the rubric of familias are the students, the administrators, the faculty, the trustees, and the alumni. As a family, we need to communicate better. With the permission of incoming Senate President James Earl, I informed the UOAA that Jim would announce to the UO Senate the formation of a "blue ribbon" panel to assist the Senate Executive Committee in its oversight task. He will provide details to you presently. But it can not be said too often that a large part of the charge is to invite the input from all the affected community (students, administrators, faculty, trustees, alumni, licensees, etc.) and in turn to communicate to them that (to quote from the Resolution of Support for President Frohnmayer which was adopted by the FAC on 8 May 2000) that the decision to join the WRC was "made through an established deliberative process, with much public debate and input from a wide cross-section of the University community. It does not reflect one person's opinion nor that of one small group. Rather, it symbolizes the combined efforts of members of the community and the University Senate, as elected representatives, to address the circumstances under which the University's name and logo are used".

I would now like to turn to lighter topics.

  1. It is my high honor and privilege to present Amanda Armadillo to Gwen Steigelman (Secretary of the Senate). Amanda is an ideal pet for an administrator as she can curl up into a shell and repel attacks.
  2. I am completing my  8th year of service on the Senate during my years at the UO. Senior Vice Provost Lorraine Davis has without question attended more Senate meetings than anyone in the room with the possible exception of Senate Parlimentarian Paul Simonds. It is with great pleasure that I make her an honorary member of the 1999/2000 UO Senate and present to her this UO Senate tee shirt and remind her "No one is listening until you make a mistake."
I promised Nathan Tublitz that mine would be a (relatively) short speech. I concluded my remarks to the assembly in the fall stating: "The purpose of the University is not bureaucracy. Rather it is Scholarship and Teaching; these are central to our University. Scholarship and Teaching are not in conflict; without scholarship we have nothing to share with our students - without communicating our knowledge, scholarship is barren." I meant every word of that. I believe that James Earl, Professor of English, exemplifies the best in scholarship and teaching that our University has to offer and I call upon you to confirm him as your next Senate President. 
Web page spun on 24 May 2000 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises