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Denver Post, CO

09-30-06



Kudos to Iowa St. for hiring Hoffman



By Terry Frei

Denver Post Staff Columnist



The No. 1 victim of the University of Colorado's football "scandal" has rebounded.



No, I'm not referring to the news that former Buffaloes coach Gary Barnett has

landed commentating positions on a couple of Fox Sports Net college football

shows.



Barnett's reputation took a largely unfair hit in the imbroglio. Yet under the

warped standards of evaluation in college football, he lost his job because of

what happened on the field, not off it. His $3 million settlement with the university

was a parachute more golden than the Buffaloes' helmets. If he decides to stay

off the sidelines, he will be an adept analyst.



The irony, of course, would be if he is pressured to take exaggerated positions

"for the sake of argument." That modern mentality about matters both

substantive and trivial caused some of the CU issues on his watch to be grossly

oversimplified and misunderstood. (Plus, the musings of the hapless Boulder

County district attorney, Mary Keenan Lacy, also came into play and were given

undeserved credibility in a media and public rush to judge and, even worse,

stereotype athletes.)



Another hiring involving a CU figure last week didn't get as much play as

Barnett's television gig, but was more significant.



Iowa State University hired Betsy Hoffman as its vice president and

provost.



Dr. Hoffman, 59, deserved another leadership opportunity, and it will come on a

campus where she previously worked as a dean. The position is on the second

tier of the power structure, and she had been provost at the University of Illinois-

Chicago earlier in her career. This is analogous to a fired head coach returning to

a role as a coordinator.



Hoffman had been keeping a low profile, teaching economics at CU's Denver

campus, which in her case was located somewhere between Limbo and Exile.



With all due respect to current CU president Hank Brown, an adept healer who

has worked the right rooms with the touch of the former politician he is,

Hoffman's departure was a major setback for the cause of higher education in the

state.



Granted, the football mess and Hoffman's reaction to it weren't the sole reasons

for her forced resignation in March 2005. Yet if not for the football controversy,

Hoffman still would be CU president.



In a Friday story in the Iowa State Daily written by Jon Avise, Hoffman said: "I

feel I accomplished a great deal at Colorado."



She's right.



Absolutely, Hoffman made mistakes in handling the "scandal," but they primarily

were the sort of aberrational and sound-bite gaffes that in this era often unfairly

live forever on tape and drown out a body of work. More important, at least to me

as a CU alumnus, Hoffman was an effective fundraiser, advocate and leader in a

state with a disgracefully meager financial commitment to higher education.



As president, she had built up sufficient goodwill in her tenure to survive the

tempest generated by Ward Churchill's abhorrent views - plus his ethnic elasticity

and manipulation of a hiring and tenure system, hypocrisy on free-speech issues

and allegations of shaky academic research.



Coupled with the football issues, though, it was too much.



Hoffman's mild defense of Churchill, including her expressed fear that an

academic "McCarthyism" was coming into play, on the surface was ill-advised.

But considered within the bigger picture of a former arts and sciences dean

defending unfettered intellectual and academic freedom, her position also was

understandable and even defensible.



In the same appearance at the Boulder Faculty Assembly that was viewed by

some of her outside critics as the last straw, Hoffman said there was cause to at

least check out the allegations about Churchill's research. It was absolutely

correct that the publicizing of Churchill's views placed him under the microscope,

and the reason for the scrutiny troubled some faculty members. But Hoffman had

the courage to tell them that ignoring the allegations, which later turned out to be

based in truth, would be irresponsible.



Still, a week later, she was told she was resigning.



Football was part of the mess that cost a good president her job. That was a

bigger loss for CU than anything that happened in a game. And good for Iowa

State for understanding that.



Staff writer Terry Frei can be reached at 303-954-1895 or tfrei@denverpost.com.



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